In the chaos following a car wreck, truck accident, or severe fall the victim often focuses on visible trauma. However, one of the most serious and complex injuries, a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), is often invisible, sometimes even to the victim themselves.
Modern medicine classifies a concussion as a Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI). This critical distinction has massive implications for how Texas courts, insurance companies, and juries view your personal injury claim.
At DFW Injury Lawyers, we are skilled in representing victims of serious accidents who have suffered brain injuries, ranging from concussions to severe, life-altering TBIs. We know that proving an invisible injury requires sophisticated diagnostic evidence and legal advocacy.
If you or a loved one is dealing with the debilitating, long-term effects of a TBI after an accident in Texas, understanding the medical classifications and the legal challenges is the first step toward securing compensation.
Call (972) 440-2320 to speak with a Texas brain injury lawyer about your TBI claim.
Key Takeaways: Concussions and TBI Litigation
- Concussion is a TBI: Medically, a concussion is classified as a Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI) and must be treated seriously. Post-Concussion Syndrome (PCS) can lead to permanent disability and chronic symptoms.
- Invisible Injury Challenge: Insurance companies dispute TBI claims because standard imaging (CT/MRI) often appears normal. The injury is often at the cellular level (such as Diffuse Axonal Injury or DAI).
- Objective Proof is Mandatory: Winning TBI claims requires advanced, objective diagnostic evidence, such as Neuropsychological Testing and specialized Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI), to quantify cognitive and structural damage for the court.
- High Valuation: TBI cases are high-value because damages extend across the victim's entire lifespan, including extensive future medical expenses, Life Care Planning costs, and massive losses in future earning capacity.
- Avoid Quick Settlement: Never settle a TBI case quickly. Full recovery and accurate valuation require reaching Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI) and securing testimony on lifelong needs.
Part 1: The Medical Definitions – Understanding the Spectrum of TBI
The term TBI is an umbrella that covers a spectrum of injuries caused by an external mechanical force, a blow, jolt, or piercing of the head, that disrupts normal brain function.
1. The Definition of a Concussion (Mild TBI)
A concussion is defined as a TBI that temporarily alters mental status or consciousness. It is often caused by the brain rapidly accelerating and decelerating within the skull.
Key characteristics of a Concussion (mTBI):
- Loss of Consciousness (LOC): May or may not occur (usually less than 30 minutes, if present).
- Imaging: Standard CT scans and MRIs often appear normal because the injury is at a cellular, metabolic, and chemical level, not a structural one.
- Symptoms: Include headaches, dizziness, nausea, confusion, sensitivity to light/sound, and cognitive issues.
- Duration: Most symptoms resolve within weeks or months. However, 10-30% of patients develop Post-Concussion Syndrome (PCS), where symptoms persist for a year or more, leading to permanent disability.
2. Moderate and Severe Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Moderate and severe TBIs involve more significant, often permanent, physical damage to the brain structure.
- Severe TBI: Defined by a prolonged loss of consciousness (over 24 hours), coma, or severe symptoms upon waking. These often involve structural damage visible on imaging, such as:
- Contusions (Bruising): Visible bleeding and bruising of the brain tissue.
- Hematomas (Bleeding): Collection of blood within or around the brain.
- Diffuse Axonal Injury (DAI): Widespread tearing of the brain’s connective fibers (axons) due to rotational forces. DAI is a primary cause of long-term disability and may only be fully detectable using advanced imaging techniques.
From a medical perspective, a concussion is a brain injury. From a legal perspective, the challenge lies in proving that the invisible damage of an mTBI causes the same long-term functional loss as a severe TBI.
Part 2: The Legal Challenge – Proving the Invisible Injury in Texas
When facing a concussion claim, the insurance industry frequently attempts to minimize the injury by leveraging old biases. Their strategy is simple: if the MRI looks normal, the injury must be minor.
1. Disputing Causation (The Delay Tactic)
Unlike a broken leg, TBI symptoms often do not manifest fully for days or weeks after the initial adrenaline wears off.
- Defense Argument: The insurance company will point to the EMS report where the victim said they were "fine" or the initial ER notes that read "Headache, non-focal." They will argue that the symptoms that appeared late were either pre-existing or caused by something else.
- Your Attorney’s Defense: We use neurological records, testimony from family members about immediate changes in behavior, and advanced diagnostic testing to establish a clear, documented chain of causation from the moment of impact to the onset of symptoms.
2. Attacking Credibility (The "Malingering" Defense)
Because mTBI symptoms are subjective, the defense often hires defense doctors and psychologists to suggest the victim is exaggerating or "malingering" for financial gain.
- Defense Tactic: They review social media, subpoena years of medical records seeking prior complaints of headaches, and employ surveillance to catch the victim performing activities they claim are too difficult.
- Your Attorney’s Defense: We counter this by establishing a clear history of the victim's pre-accident life and using objective evidence from neuropsychological testing that demonstrates verifiable cognitive deficits.
3. The Lack of Objective Imaging
If a standard MRI or CT scan is clear, the defense will claim there is no objective evidence of injury. This is the biggest hurdle in mTBI cases.
- Diagnostic Tools: We work with experts who utilize advanced, objective testing to prove brain damage that conventional imaging misses:
- Neuropsychological Testing: Administered by neuropsychologists, these rigorous tests objectively measure and quantify deficits in memory, processing speed, attention, and executive function.
- Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI): An advanced MRI technique that maps the white matter tracts of the brain, revealing damage to the axons (DAI) that correlate precisely with cognitive deficits.
- Functional MRIs (fMRI): Measures blood flow in the brain during specific cognitive tasks, revealing abnormalities in brain activity patterns.
Using these objective diagnostic results, we transform the victim’s subjective complaints into quantifiable, undeniable medical evidence of physical injury.
Part 3: Valuation and Damages in TBI Claims
The valuation of a TBI claim is one of the highest in personal injury litigation because the damage is often permanent, affecting every aspect of a victim’s life, work, family, social interaction, and emotional health.
1. Economic Damages (Quantifiable Losses)
These damages are calculated to cover all financial losses stemming from the injury.
- Past and Future Medical Expenses: This goes beyond initial ER visits and includes long-term costs for neurologists, cognitive therapists, vocational rehabilitation, prescription drugs, and counseling.
- Lost Wages and Impaired Earning Capacity: For a serious TBI, we hire economists to project the victim’s total lost earnings over their entire expected working career. A subtle but permanent drop in cognitive function can prevent a professional from returning to a high-level job, resulting in millions of dollars in future losses.
- Life Care Planning: In severe TBI cases, a life care planner is retained to detail every single future need, from assistive devices and home health aides to specialized transportation, providing a detailed, itemized report of necessary lifetime expenditures.
2. Non-Economic Damages (Quality of Life Losses)
These subjective damages compensate the victim for the profound and often devastating emotional and psychological toll of a brain injury.
- Pain and Suffering: Chronic headaches, dizziness, and fatigue.
- Mental Anguish: Depression, anxiety, and heightened irritability (a common TBI symptom that strains family relationships).
- Loss of Consortium: Compensation awarded to the victim’s spouse for the loss of companionship, support, and intimacy caused by the injury.
Because TBIs fundamentally alter a person's personality and ability to function, we focus on presenting compelling evidence, testimony from spouses, children, and colleagues, to illustrate the heartbreaking loss of the victim’s pre-accident self to justify high non-economic damage awards.
Part 4: The Critical Role of Your Lawyer
Successfully litigating a TBI claim against a major insurance carrier requires an attorney who knows the medical science as well as the law.
1. Access to the Right Medical Experts
Many general practice doctors or even emergency room physicians are not specialized enough to properly diagnose a chronic mTBI or DAI. We ensure our clients are immediately referred to leading specialists, including:
- Neuropsychologists: To conduct the objective cognitive testing required for legal proof.
- Neurologists: To manage the chronic physical symptoms (headaches, seizures).
- TBI Rehabilitation Doctors: To oversee the crucial recovery process and certify the MMI and impairment ratings.
2. Understanding Insurance Tactics in Texas
Insurance carriers in Texas aggressively defend TBI claims because of their high monetary value. They will attempt to settle quickly before the victim fully understands the long-term impact of their injury.
- Settlement Traps: They may offer a quick, low settlement for a concussion, hoping the victim signs a release before being diagnosed with PCS, which could be worth ten times that amount.
- Our Defense: We refuse to settle until MMI is reached, all necessary diagnostic testing is completed, and the full, long-term financial prognosis is known. We take all necessary steps, including preparing for trial, to force the insurance company to value the claim based on the medical reality, not their internal budget.
3. Handling Texas Injury Law
Texas law provides limited time to file a lawsuit (the Statute of Limitations). Furthermore, if the TBI victim is a minor, the laws related to settlements and trusts are highly specific. An experienced TBI lawyer ensures that all deadlines are met and that any settlement funds are structured to legally protect the victim's financial future.
Why Choose Us for Your TBI Case?
Litigating a traumatic brain injury claim, whether it is a severe TBI or a chronic post-concussion syndrome case, is fundamentally different from a standard personal injury claim. It requires a focus that most general practice firms lack.
1. TBI-Specific Medical Network
We have pre-established relationships with the top neuro-specialists in the DFW area, including neurologists who specialize in concussion management, neuropsychologists who perform DTI and advanced cognitive testing, and life care planners.
We ensure you receive the proper diagnosis and documentation that transforms a subjective complaint into objective, verifiable medical evidence for the court.
2. Skilled in Proving Invisible Injuries
We excel at securing and presenting advanced diagnostic proof, such as DTI results and comprehensive neuropsychological evaluations. We understand how to educate a Texas jury on brain science, ensuring they understand that "normal" CT and MRI results do not rule out devastating white matter damage (DAI) or metabolic disruption.
3. Maximizing Lifetime Valuation
TBI injuries are forever. We use forensic economists and life care planning specialists to project the full, lifelong financial impact of your injury, accounting for lost earning capacity, therapy, and decades of projected future care. We never accept a quick, low settlement that jeopardizes your financial security down the road.
4. Trial Ready, Focused Advocacy
Insurance companies know that TBI claims are difficult and expensive to defend when handled by a firm that goes to trial. Our reputation for preparing every TBI case for a jury verdict provides the necessary leverage to force the insurer to offer maximum settlement value during negotiation, recognizing the immense risk they face in court.
Don't Minimize Your Concussion
If you or a loved one experienced any impact to the head, loss of consciousness, confusion, or lingering cognitive issues after an accident in Texas, you must treat it as a serious injury. Do not let an insurance adjuster diminish your suffering by calling it a concussion.
At DFW Injury Lawyers, we understand that a TBI can change everything about your life, from your career path to your relationship with your family. We are committed to securing the financial resources necessary to manage your long-term care and cognitive needs.
If you suspect a concussion or TBI after an accident, your health and your legal future depend on seeking immediate, legal and medical help from a Texas personal injury lawyer. Contact us today for a free, confidential case evaluation. We are ready to put our experience in TBI litigation to work for you.
Call (972) 440-2320 or fill out our online form now.