Injuries to the brain are frequently misunderstood because symptoms aren’t always visible. In De Pere, where residents commute for work and school and share roads with cyclists and pedestrians, head impacts can happen in ways that don’t always “look serious” at first—especially if you were able to drive yourself home or return to daily tasks.
But with traumatic brain injuries, what matters is the timeline:
- when symptoms began,
- whether they were reported consistently,
- what treatments were recommended and followed,
- and what functional limits doctors documented.
That timeline is what settlement discussions are built on. Without it, insurers often argue your symptoms were unrelated, temporary, or exaggerated.


