In a lot of Alamo cases, the early story is incomplete: symptoms may start as “dizziness” or “a bad headache,” then evolve into memory problems or light sensitivity over days or weeks. That gap can become a focal point for insurers.
Instead of chasing an estimated range, focus on getting your record to tell a consistent timeline:
- When symptoms began (same day vs. delayed)
- How they changed (improving, plateauing, or worsening)
- What treatment you sought and when
- How the injury affected commuting reliability, job duties, and daily functioning
Texas claims—whether they settle early or proceed—generally require a clear connection between the incident and the neurological effects. When the record is messy or delayed, the defense may argue the symptoms came from something else.


