In many Washington-area cases, the hardest part isn’t proving you were hurt—it’s explaining how the injury evolved. Traumatic brain injuries can involve symptoms that appear immediately (headache, dizziness, nausea) or later (memory problems, sleep disruption, mood changes, concentration issues).
When people rely on an AI estimate too early, they may miss a key reality: insurers and adjusters look for a coherent story across:
- the date of injury and immediate reports
- follow-up medical visits and diagnoses
- documented changes in work capacity and daily functioning
- whether symptoms stayed consistent or were interrupted
If your early symptoms were mild but later became more disabling, the legal value of the case may increase—but only when the record supports continuity.


