In Princeton, many injuries happen in situations that don’t “look severe” at the scene—until later. Common examples include:
- Rear-end and side-impact crashes where the body absorbs blunt force, but bruising is limited
- Slip-and-fall incidents on parking lots, sidewalks, or indoor surfaces with concentrated impact
- Construction and warehouse work accidents involving falls, dropped items, or awkward landings
- Recreational injuries after events where adrenaline masks symptoms
Internal trauma can involve bleeding, organ irritation, tissue damage, or nerve-related complications. The key is that the claim must explain not just that you’re hurt, but why the specific impact mechanism fits the medical findings.


