In many traumatic brain injury cases, the dispute doesn’t center on whether the injury happened—it centers on how the symptoms behaved afterward and whether the medical record supports that timeline.
That’s especially important in local scenarios such as:
- Rear-end and lane-change crashes on busy corridors, where symptoms may start subtly (dizziness, headaches, “foggy” thinking) and evolve over days.
- Slip-and-fall incidents at stores, apartment common areas, or walkways where a head strike is followed by nausea, sleep disruption, or concentration problems.
- Pedestrian/bike impacts near higher-traffic zones, where the initial event may be traumatic even when the first medical findings appear limited.
An AI tool may generate a range based on injury labels and general patterns. But insurance adjusters in Florida typically look for a coherent story supported by records—and that story is built after the crash, not just at the moment of impact.


