In East Texas, many serious incidents happen on familiar routes—commuter traffic, highway merges, and sudden braking in changing weather. After an impact, people often delay care because they feel “mostly okay,” especially if they’re back at home or at work. But with internal injuries, the timeline matters.
When symptoms appear later—worsening abdominal pain, dizziness, shortness of breath, severe headaches, or unusual weakness—the defense may argue the injury wasn’t caused by the incident. The strongest Mount Pleasant internal injury cases are built by matching:
- the mechanism of injury (how force was applied)
- the symptom timeline (when things changed)
- the medical proof (what clinicians documented and why tests were ordered)


