An internal injury case is not defined by whether the injury is visible. It’s defined by whether there is a medically recognized harm inside the body and whether it can be linked to an incident caused by another person’s negligence or wrongdoing. That may involve blunt force trauma, compression injuries, falls, or situations where an impact concentrates force in a way that can affect internal organs.
In Connecticut, internal injury claims frequently involve incidents connected to everyday life: rear-end collisions, side-impact crashes, trip-and-fall accidents on uneven sidewalks, and workplace events where heavy equipment, tools, or lifting mechanics can cause trauma. Even if the initial evaluation seems reassuring, internal injuries can evolve as swelling increases, bleeding develops, or complications appear later.
The legal challenge is that insurers often focus on what can be easily measured—imaging findings, documented symptoms, and treatment timing. That focus can be fair, but it can also overlook the reality that patients don’t control how quickly tests are ordered or how symptoms progress. A lawyer helps ensure the claim reflects the medical narrative as documented, not as simplified.
It’s also important to understand that internal injury cases are often evidence-driven. Your claim can be stronger when your medical records explain what was found, why it likely resulted from trauma, and how your symptoms align with the mechanism of injury. When the records are thin or inconsistent, the case can become harder to negotiate.


