In Houston, the timeline can be the difference between “minor impact” and a compensable injury—particularly with blunt-force trauma. Many residents are evaluated hours after an incident due to work schedules, childcare, long EMS/ER wait times, or the sheer difficulty of getting appointments.
In internal injury cases, delayed symptoms are common. Swelling can increase, bruising can appear later, and internal bleeding or tissue injury may declare itself after the initial adrenaline wears off. That means your claim needs a coherent story tying together:
- When the force happened (impact details)
- When symptoms changed (pain, dizziness, abdominal issues, shortness of breath, headaches, etc.)
- When you sought tests (ER/urgent care visits, CT/MRI timing, specialist follow-ups)
- How doctors described findings (not just “normal,” but what was ruled out and what was later found)
Houston insurers may argue that symptoms could be unrelated or that you waited too long. A lawyer helps you keep the focus on medical plausibility and documentation rather than assumptions.


