A common problem in internal injury cases is timing. You may feel “mostly okay” after the incident, then develop worsening symptoms overnight or over the next several days.
That pattern can be especially common when the initial event involves:
- Rear-end or side-impact crashes where the body absorbs force that isn’t immediately obvious
- Slip-and-fall incidents on uneven surfaces, parking lots, or wet walkways
- Workplace injuries involving falls, lifting, or being struck by equipment
- Sports and event-related collisions where swelling and internal stress build gradually
Insurance adjusters may try to frame delayed symptoms as unrelated or exaggerated. In North Carolina, the strength of your claim often turns on how well your records connect the incident to what doctors later diagnose. If your timeline isn’t documented clearly, the defense may argue causation is missing—even when your medical findings suggest otherwise.


