Many people in Cortland first notice their symptoms years after service or residence. That delay can make it harder to connect the dots between an exposure event and later diagnoses—especially when:
- symptoms evolve gradually,
- medical charts use vague language,
- earlier test results are incomplete, or
- different providers offered different possible causes.
A lawyer’s job is to close that timeline gap by building a claim that’s easier to evaluate—matching when exposure likely occurred with how symptoms and diagnoses developed.


