A lot of internal injury cases begin the same way: the initial evaluation says you’re okay, or you’re treated for “minor” injuries, and then symptoms intensify. In Radcliff, that often plays out after:
- Rear-end or sideswipe crashes where the body absorbs force even if airbags deploy
- Falls on uneven surfaces near parking lots, sidewalks, and entryways
- Workplace incidents involving trips, heavy equipment, or impact injuries
The concern isn’t only the injury—it’s the paperwork trail. Insurance adjusters may argue that your later symptoms don’t match the event, or that you waited too long to get follow-up care.
A lawyer’s job is to build a timeline that makes medical sense and connects the mechanism of injury to the findings in your records.


