Many head-injury cases in the area stem from collisions on busy connectors and commutes—situations where witnesses, lane position, speed, and documentation matter. Even when liability seems obvious at first, insurers frequently argue about:
- whether the crash caused the symptoms you reported
- whether your symptoms were pre-existing or related to another event
- whether your treatment was prompt and consistent
For residents, this can feel frustrating because brain injury symptoms aren’t always visible. Headaches, dizziness, “brain fog,” concentration problems, sleep disruption, and mood changes can be real—even if they don’t show up on a single scan.
That’s why your settlement value depends on how your case is assembled: the accident facts, the medical findings, and how your clinicians tie your functional limits to the mechanism of injury.


