In internal injury cases, the claim usually turns on whether your records show (1) a real injury and (2) a medical timeline that fits the incident.
That matters a lot after blunt-force events that are common locally:
- Rear-end and side-impact crashes (seat belts and head/torso movement can contribute to internal trauma)
- Falls from steps, loading docks, or uneven pavement around residential and business properties
- Industrial and logistics-related accidents where a person is struck by equipment or experiences sudden force during a shift
- Backyard, sports, and home incidents where the body “looks fine” but internal symptoms can appear later
If imaging, lab work, or clinician notes don’t clearly connect to the incident, insurers may argue the injury “could have happened anyway.” Your goal is to build a paper trail that makes that argument harder.


