// INJURY FILE
SERIOUS INJURYInternal Injuries
claims after a truck accident.
The force of a truck collision can cause internal organ damage — ruptured spleen, liver lacerations, collapsed lung, or internal bleeding.
// 01 / COMPENSATION
What compensation can you claim for internal injuries?
Internal injury claims often involve emergency surgery and ICU stays. Insurance companies frequently dispute causation — immediate hospital records are the most critical evidence. Delayed diagnosis weakens claims significantly.
// 02 / INJURY EVIDENCE
Specific evidence for internal injuries
Emergency room records, CT imaging, surgical reports, ICU records. Critical: seek medical attention immediately even if you feel fine — internal bleeding can be asymptomatic initially.
// 03 / EVIDENCE — SHARED
What evidence proves your injury in a truck accident claim
Regardless of injury type, the core evidence in every truck accident injury claim follows the same pattern:
// EVIDENCE
Medical records from day 1
Emergency room or urgent care records from the date of the accident establish the causal link between the crash and your injury. Delayed treatment is routinely used by insurers to argue the injury was pre-existing or not serious.
// EVIDENCE
Consistent treatment history
Regular GP visits, specialist appointments, and therapy records demonstrate the injury's ongoing impact. Gaps in treatment are used to argue you recovered.
// EVIDENCE
Expert medical testimony
For serious injuries, a treating specialist or independent medical expert will typically be required to testify about the nature, permanence, and future care needs of your injury.
// EVIDENCE
Functional impact evidence
Records showing how the injury affects daily life — work absences, inability to perform activities, caregiver costs — support both economic and non-economic damages.
// EVIDENCE
Photographs and video
Visual documentation of your injuries at each stage of recovery. Many claimants underestimate the value of regular injury photographs throughout treatment.
// 04 / PRE-EXISTING CONDITIONS
Pre-existing conditions and your claim
Insurance companies frequently argue that your injuries are pre-existing conditions unrelated to the truck accident. The 'eggshell plaintiff' rule — recognised in all US states — means that a defendant must take the victim as they find them. If the truck accident aggravated or accelerated a pre-existing condition, you are entitled to compensation for the worsening caused by the accident, even if you were not perfectly healthy before. Detailed medical records comparing your condition before and after the accident are the key evidence.
// 05 / SETTLEMENT VALUE
How internal injuries affects your settlement value
Settlement value depends on organ damage severity and lasting functional impact.
Settlement value is driven by three things: (1) the medical reality documented in your records, (2) the projected future cost of treatment and care, and (3) how your earning capacity changes as a result of the injury. Catastrophic injuries reach the highest awards because all three are large; moderate injuries depend almost entirely on consistent medical documentation to defeat insurer pushback.
// 04 / RELATED
Related injuries we handle.
// 05 / FREE REVIEW
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Build out your internal injuries claim:
- Full truck accident compensation breakdown → for every recoverable loss after a truck crash.
- FMCSA violations that cause internal injuries → — hours of service breaches, brake failure, fatigue and more.
- Average truck accident settlement amounts → by injury severity and the factors that move the number.
- Start a free internal injuries claim review → — a specialist will respond within 24 hours.