Bel Air residents frequently deal with traffic patterns that can complicate how injuries are described and documented—like sudden braking, lane changes, and late-day congestion. For TBI, that matters because symptoms may not be obvious at first.
People often report things like:
- headaches that intensify later
- dizziness or “foggy” thinking that affects driving or work
- memory gaps, mood changes, or sleep disruption
When symptoms evolve, the case becomes about sequence: what happened, when symptoms began, what medical professionals observed, and how consistently you sought care. An AI tool may ask for symptom dates and severity, but it can’t verify whether your medical record supports the connection between the crash and your neurological complaints.


