After a traumatic brain injury, symptoms can be invisible. You may look “fine” while dealing with headaches, dizziness, sleep disruption, memory problems, or concentration issues. When that happens, the strongest cases tend to be the ones with a clear record showing:
- When symptoms started (immediately vs. delayed)
- How they changed over time
- What treatment was pursued and whether it was consistent
- How the injury affected work and daily activities—not just how you felt
In communities like Shasta Lake, it’s common for people to keep working (or attempt to work) even with cognitive strain. That can be financially necessary—but it also means your claim may need extra support tying the injury to specific limitations (missed tasks, reduced output, safety concerns while driving, difficulty with concentration, etc.).


