Injuries like internal bleeding, organ trauma, and soft-tissue injuries inside the body may not show up immediately. In the Chicagoland area—where people often commute long distances, get back to work quickly, and manage kids’ schedules—delayed symptoms are common. The legal problem is that insurers frequently argue the delay means your condition wasn’t caused by the incident.
That’s why your case usually hinges on:
- When symptoms changed (not just when the accident happened)
- How quickly you sought follow-up care once symptoms worsened
- How your medical records describe causation and consistency with the mechanism of injury
If you waited because you were told to “monitor,” or because you believed the pain would pass, that can still be reasonable—but the reasonableness needs to be supported by records, not assumptions.


