AI tools typically generate a range based on a few inputs you provide. That can be useful for understanding which categories of damages might be involved, but it can miss key realities that show up in real Texas spinal cord injury claims—particularly when the injury occurred in a high-speed traffic environment or during complex multi-party incidents.
Common reasons an AI number may be off:
- Injury severity isn’t fully captured. Two people can have the same general diagnosis yet have very different motor strength, sensation, bladder/bowel function, and long-term mobility outcomes.
- Future care needs are guessed instead of documented. Spinal cord injuries often require durable medical equipment, ongoing therapy, medication management, and sometimes home accessibility changes.
- Liability disputes change settlement posture. In Texas, fault and causation are often contested. If insurers challenge what caused the neurological damage, settlement can lag until medical proof is stronger.


