In many internal injury cases, the first few hours are misleading. You may walk away from the scene, then later develop symptoms that weren’t present initially—such as dizziness, nausea, increasing bruising, abdominal tenderness, shortness of breath, or pain that spikes when you move.
In Avon Lake, that pattern often shows up after:
- Rear-end collisions and side impacts during high-volume commuting periods
- Slip-and-fall incidents on wet sidewalks, shopping plaza entrances, or icy patches
- Workplace falls from ladders, platforms, or maintenance work where impact concentrates in the torso or head
- Dog-walk or park-related impacts where the injury is underestimated at the time
The key point: insurance adjusters may treat early symptom reports as “proof” the injury wasn’t real or wasn’t caused by the incident. Your attorney’s job is to make sure the claim reflects what changed medically over time—not just what you felt in the first moment.


