Many internal injury claims hinge on a narrow window of time—when you were hurt, when symptoms changed, when you sought care, and what clinicians documented.
In Minnesota, seasonal conditions can contribute to delays in treatment or diagnostic clarity. For example, an injury may occur during winter travel or around thaw/refreeze cycles, and people sometimes assume soreness or pain is “just the cold” or minor strain. Then lab work, imaging, or specialist notes reveal internal trauma that wasn’t fully apparent at the start.
Your claim can become disputed when the insurer argues:
- You waited too long to be seen.
- The symptoms don’t match the type of injury described.
- The findings could be unrelated.
A lawyer’s job is to make the timeline persuasive—showing that your reporting and care decisions were reasonable and that the medical evidence fits the way the injury likely developed.


