

Hiring traumatic brain injury lawyers gives brain injury victims the legal and strategic support needed to handle the unique challenges of brain injury cases. Some of these benefits include:
When you are facing the life-altering effects of a traumatic brain injury, choosing the right legal team can directly impact the outcome of your compensation claim. Burg & Brock provides focused, client-first legal representation for brain injury victims. We combine medical insight, strategic advocacy, and relentless pursuit of justice in complex brain injury cases.
Here's why you should work with us:
Understanding traumatic brain injury cases and the legal process can feel overwhelming, especially while managing medical treatment and recovery. These frequently asked questions address the common issues that brain injury victims face when considering legal representation..
Any disruption of normal brain function caused by an external force, ranging from a brief change in mental status (concussion) to extended unconsciousness or memory loss after the injury. The Glasgow Coma Scale grades severity: 13-15 mild, 9-12 moderate, 3-8 severe. Each level changes the case value substantially.
Through neuropsychological testing, DTI MRI (diffusion tensor imaging), QEEG, and clinical observation by neurologists and neuropsychologists. Standard CT and MRI often miss mild TBI. Diffuse axonal injury cases require specialized imaging that not all radiologists perform.
Mild TBI with no permanent symptoms settles $25,000 to $100,000. Moderate TBI with documented cognitive impairment $250,000 to $1 million. Severe TBI requiring lifelong care exceeds $5 million. Value tracks the future medical, attendant care, and lost earning capacity rather than the past medical bills.
Two years from the injury under Code of Civil Procedure section 335.1. The discovery rule may extend the deadline if symptoms were not reasonably discoverable until later. We document delayed-symptom-onset cases with detailed clinical timelines.
Yes. Personality and behavioral changes are documented through neuropsychological evaluation and family-member testimony. These changes affect relationships, employment, and quality of life. Loss of consortium is a separate claim for spouses.
A second head injury before the first heals causes disproportionately severe and sometimes fatal swelling. It is most common in athletes and accident victims who return to activity too soon. Cases involving second-impact syndrome carry premium settlement value.
Neurologists, neurosurgeons, neuropsychologists, neuroradiologists, life-care planners, vocational economists, and (in severe cases) neuroengineers for biomechanical reconstruction. Burg & Brock works with a network of qualified experts across California.
Delayed onset is common with TBI and does not bar a claim. We document the symptom progression with contemporaneous medical records and the clinical literature supporting delayed presentation. The defense will attack delay, so build the medical record early.
Past and future medical bills, attendant care costs, lost wages and earning capacity, pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, and loss of consortium for spouses. Life care plans drive damages in moderate to severe cases.
No. TBI cases need 12 to 18 months of treatment to reach maximum medical improvement. Settling earlier underestimates future damages. Insurance companies offer fast small settlements precisely to close the case before full damages are known.
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