People turn to AI-style tools because they want structure: inputs, categories, and an answer that doesn’t require legal expertise.
That’s understandable. A TBI claim often involves multiple types of losses—medical bills, lost wages, ongoing therapy, and non-economic impacts such as cognitive and emotional changes. AI tools may also organize information quickly for things like treatment history or symptom duration.
But in practice, the number produced by an AI estimate can be misleading when:
- your symptoms evolved (or worsened) over time
- your medical records don’t clearly connect the accident to the neurological effects
- the insurer argues another cause (common with headaches, stress, sleep issues, or prior conditions)
In other words, an AI output can help you prepare questions—it can’t replace a legal team’s job of building a claim that matches Louisiana evidence standards and insurance negotiation realities.


