West Memphis traffic moves fast—commutes, freight routes, and multi-lane roads increase the chances that head injuries happen in ways that aren’t obvious at first glance. In many TBI cases, the dispute isn’t whether you’re hurt. It’s whether the injury is tied to the incident and how severe it is.
What tends to matter:
- Timing of the first medical visit: Delayed care can create doubt about causation.
- Early symptom reporting: Headache, dizziness, confusion, memory problems, light sensitivity, and sleep disruption should be documented consistently.
- Mechanism of injury: Sudden-impact crashes, debris strikes, falls, or being hit by an object can support the kind of neurological symptoms that follow.
- Objective support where available: While many concussion symptoms aren’t visible on imaging, medical notes, neuro assessments, and specialist findings can still create a strong record.
A calculator can’t know whether the police report matches the medical story—or whether witnesses can corroborate what happened right after impact. Those are the details that frequently shape settlement leverage.


