Miami Lakes is a place where people spend time moving—on local connectors, busy intersections, and highways that can see sudden braking and lane changes. That matters for neck and back injuries because many claims stem from:
- Rear-end collisions where whiplash-type forces jolt the cervical spine and upper back
- T-bone and side-impact crashes that twist the torso and strain ligaments or discs
- Stop-and-go traffic that increases the chance of sudden impact and harder-to-pinpoint symptom onset
Sometimes symptoms don’t hit at full intensity right away. Other times, they worsen over the next several days as inflammation and muscle guarding set in. In Miami Lakes, we often see people try to “push through” pain because they have to get back to work—then the delay becomes a defense talking point.


