In our area, many internal injury cases begin with an event that seems “minor” at first—then symptoms escalate after the adrenaline wears off. That pattern is common after:
- Car and truck collisions on commuting corridors (neck, chest, and abdominal impacts)
- Falls at apartment complexes, retail centers, and parking lots where the surface is uneven, wet, or poorly lit
- Sports and event-related impacts, including high-intensity contact and crowd movement
- Construction and warehouse work where blunt force and repetitive strain can complicate injury identification
Internal injury problems often worsen as swelling increases or as bleeding accumulates. If your pain, dizziness, shortness of breath, abdominal discomfort, or weakness shows up hours—or even days—after the incident, that does not automatically mean the injury wasn’t caused by it.
The legal issue becomes timing and proof: whether the medical records and symptom timeline can credibly connect what happened in Gainesville to what clinicians later found.


