One of the most common patterns we see in Broken Arrow cases is this: a person is evaluated right after a wreck, told they’re “okay,” then symptoms progress over the next 24–72 hours. That can include:
- abdominal pain or “pressure” that worsens
- bruising that appears later
- headaches, nausea, or dizziness after a head impact
- shortness of breath or chest discomfort after blunt trauma
- back pain that escalates after the initial soreness fades
- fatigue, weakness, or lightheadedness that doesn’t match the initial exam
Internal injuries don’t always look dramatic on day one. The legal risk is that insurance adjusters may argue the delay means the symptoms were unrelated. The fix is not guesswork—it’s building a credible timeline and pairing it with medical records that explain how the injury could develop after a specific mechanism of force.


