Tuscaloosa traffic can change fast—morning rush, evening traffic near stadium events, and sudden congestion around work zones. In many crashes, the initial complaint seems minor: soreness, bruising, or “just feeling off.” But internal injuries may develop as swelling increases, bleeding accumulates, or the body reacts over the next 24–72 hours.
This is why the first medical visit matters, even if you think you can “walk it off.” Clinicians may order CT scans, ultrasounds, lab work, or specialist evaluations to rule out internal trauma. For a claim, the key is whether medical findings can be tied to the incident mechanics and your symptom timeline.
If you’re seeing symptoms after the fact—abdominal pain, dizziness, worsening headaches, shortness of breath, pain when swallowing, or unexplained weakness—don’t assume it’s unrelated. In Tuscaloosa injury cases, insurance adjusters often ask for “objective proof.” Medical documentation is how you supply it.


