Closed-Head Injury | Brain Injury

How We At Nadrich & Cohen Go About Proving A Closed-Head Injury | Brain Injury Cases

We have many times successfully proven closed-head injury cases which are in reality mild traumatic brain injury cases. Most of our mild brain injury cases involve no initial diagnosis of a brain injury, no documented loss of consciousness, but continued complaints of fatigue, headaches, insomnia, nightmares, lack of concentration, memory lapses, muscle pain, bad temper, etc.

We can prove that a permanent brain injury can and did occur from any time period of a loss of consciousness no matter how short resulting in lack of memory of the event of the accident, or cognitive neurological deficits.

As California brain injury lawyers, we have shown permanent brain injuries when our clients have suffered the following:

In order to do this successfully, we gather witnesses to show (people in our clients' life before and after the accident) the difference in the quality of our clients' life both before and after the accident. We will show that the head injury symptoms our client suffers from was from the accident.

We will then go to the analysis of the vehicles (if it was a car crash), and study what the mechanisms of the injury were so we can show how the brain was impacted in some manner, such as a broken windshield or broken seat back, etc.

We use vocational experts who have brain injury experience who can discuss the loss of wages.

These are some of the ways we establish a closed head injury mild traumatic brain injury case.

If you or a loved one suffered anything related to the above from an accident, please contact one of our intake specialists at Nadrich & Cohen by calling us at 1-800-718-4658. Because of our success, we have
18 offices throughout California. We have an office near you.

We are contingency lawyers, which means there is no fee until we first obtain a settlement or recovery from the at-fault parties.

Please contact us today so that an experienced attorney can review your injury claim.