In a typical Eastpointe scenario—such as a rear-end collision during evening commute hours—symptoms may start immediately or build over the next 24–72 hours. That gap matters.
Insurers frequently look for inconsistencies like:
- treatment that started “too late”
- gaps in physical therapy or follow-up visits
- changing statements about how the injury occurred
- reports that don’t match documented range-of-motion limits
The practical takeaway: even if you feel sore at first, getting checked promptly and keeping follow-up appointments can strengthen both medical credibility and injury causation.


