Many traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases start with what seems like a minor incident: a sudden stop on the way home, a fall on an uneven walkway, a collision while merging, or a head impact during sports or recreation.
In Calabasas, the pattern we see is that people may return to normal activities quickly—then symptoms appear or intensify later: headaches that don’t behave like “usual,” dizziness, trouble concentrating during meetings or studying, sleep disruption, irritability, and memory problems.
That delayed or evolving symptom timeline matters legally. If the record doesn’t clearly connect the incident to neurological effects, insurers may argue the injury resolved faster—or never caused the full extent of harm.


