You don’t need to “diagnose” your case. What matters is whether the facts can support liability and whether your treatment shows a real, ongoing injury.
Your claim usually has stronger momentum when:
- There’s documentation connecting the incident to your symptoms (ER/urgent care notes, follow-up visits, imaging, physical therapy).
- You reported symptoms consistently and reasonably soon after the event.
- Your job duties, commuting, or home life changed in ways clinicians can recognize (reduced mobility, limitations, missed work).
- The other party’s negligence is supported by evidence—such as dashcam footage, witness statements, or incident reports.
If you’re wondering about an “AI lawyer” or spinal-injury chatbot: those tools can help organize information, but they can’t replace a legal review of what your evidence supports under North Carolina’s injury and insurance rules.


