Addison’s daily mix of commuters, ride-share traffic, and high-volume intersections can create fact disputes even when the injury feels obvious. In many cases, insurers question:
- How the collision happened (rear-end, lane change, sudden braking, merging)
- Whether the force could cause the reported symptoms
- Whether delays in treatment mean the injury is unrelated
- Whether prior conditions were the real cause
Spine injuries often don’t look dramatic immediately. Pain can peak days later, muscle spasms can limit motion, and headaches may show up after the initial soreness. The defense may use that timing to argue “it was temporary” or “it’s something else.” Your attorney’s job is to connect the timeline—incident to symptoms to medical findings—into an organized, persuasive record.


