Conway residents frequently deal with situations where symptoms aren’t obvious—headaches, dizziness, fogginess, sleep disruption, irritability, memory gaps. In these cases, the claim often rises or falls based on whether you can show:
- When symptoms started (and whether you reported them consistently)
- What medical providers observed (ER notes, follow-up visits, specialist impressions)
- How function changed (work restrictions, missed shifts, difficulty driving, inability to handle normal tasks)
Because TBI symptoms may fluctuate, the “paper trail” matters more than many people expect. A calculator may assume a steady, fully documented recovery. Real cases—especially those involving outpatient treatment, delays in appointments, or changing symptom patterns—require a clearer narrative.


