In Mankato, catastrophic injuries frequently happen on routes people use every day—commuting corridors, highway merges, and intersections where traffic patterns change quickly in different seasons.
Paralysis claims usually depend on proving three things with clarity:
- What caused the incident (the event itself)
- How the incident caused the paralysis (medical causation)
- What the paralysis has cost and will cost (damages)
Because paralysis can evolve medically, the “early timeline” matters. Small gaps—missed imaging, delayed documentation, unclear witness accounts, or inconsistent statements—can give insurers room to argue the injury came from something else.
A local attorney’s job is to help you avoid those gaps by building a timeline that matches the medical record and the facts of what happened.


