In the western suburbs of Chicago, incidents frequently happen in patterns that make timing crucial. People may get checked out at urgent care, return to work the next day, or delay follow-up when symptoms are intermittent.
With internal injuries, that gap can become a battleground:
- Symptoms may build over hours or days (swelling, bruising inside the body, bleeding that becomes detectable later).
- Imaging may be ordered after worsening symptoms—meaning the first visit might not capture the full story.
- Insurance adjusters may point to “normal” early evaluations and argue the injury wasn’t caused by the incident.
A strong Woodridge claim focuses on the timeline—not just the diagnosis. The goal is to show that what doctors later found fits what happened and when symptoms changed.


