Many head-injury cases in and around New Berlin involve common local scenarios—especially on roads where traffic patterns can change quickly:
- Commuter crashes where sudden braking or lane changes lead to head impacts, even when the initial report sounds minor.
- Rear-end collisions that may cause symptoms to appear later (headaches, dizziness, memory issues).
- Vehicle-pedestrian or sidewalk incidents in higher-foot-traffic areas, where falls can create traumatic brain injuries with unclear timelines.
A key issue in these cases is that brain injury effects can be delayed or evolving. That creates a practical challenge: insurers may argue symptoms are unrelated or exaggerated unless the medical record tracks the progression clearly.


