The Shoulder
The Shoulder
63
Car accidentshearty-sparrow-202

Delayed nerve damage from my crash is scaring the hell out of me — anyone else deal with this?

I need to vent and also genuinely want to know if anyone's been through something similar.

Back in the spring I got rear-ended pretty hard on the highway — the other driver wasn't paying attention and hit me at full speed while I was basically stopped in traffic. My arms took a beating from gripping the wheel on impact. The ER checked me out, said I had some soft tissue strain, gave me a brace for one arm, and sent me home. A few weeks later the soreness was mostly gone and I figured I was in the clear.

Fast forward to recently — I started noticing this weird pins-and-needles feeling shooting through my fingers on my dominant hand. At first it was random and brief, so I kind of brushed it off. But over the past week it's gotten progressively worse. Some mornings I wake up and my hand feels like it's completely asleep and it takes way too long to come back. Dropping things I'm trying to hold. Struggling to type.

Went back to my doctor yesterday and she's referring me to a neurologist and possibly a specialist. She said the crash likely caused nerve compression that just took time to fully show up. They're talking about testing, and depending on results, potentially a procedure.

I'm 24. I work in a field where I need my hands constantly. The idea that this could affect my ability to do my job long-term is genuinely terrifying. I feel like I handled the emotional aftermath of the crash okay but this news today just broke something in me.

Has anyone dealt with delayed nerve issues after a wreck? Did it get better? I don't even know what questions to ask the specialist yet.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    cool-tern-912

    Not legal advice, but just so you know — delayed injury discovery doesn't automatically bar you from recovery. Courts and claims processes recognize that some injuries evolve over time. The key is having clear medical documentation linking the nerve issue to the accident. Make sure every provider you see knows the full history of how this started. Definitely worth a free consultation with a PI attorney if you haven't already, especially if there's any chance of surgery.

    • 15
      bold-marmot-657

      I'm so sorry you're going through this. You handled something scary already and now you get hit with this on top of it — that's just really unfair. I hope the specialist appointment brings you some clarity and better news than you're imagining right now. Sending you a lot of good thoughts.

  • 19
    bright-stoat-458

    Please be careful with the insurance side of this. If you've already been talking to their adjuster or — worse — if you settled anything thinking you were 'healed,' this new development could complicate things. Insurers love when people settle fast before delayed injuries surface. Don't sign anything and don't let them downplay this as unrelated to the crash just because it showed up later.

    • 1
      calm-wanderer606

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 19
    spry-heron-184

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now but the fact that you went back to the doctor when things felt off — and that they're taking it seriously and referring you — means you caught this before ignoring it made it worse. A lot of people push through symptoms hoping they'll disappear and end up in a harder place because of it. You advocated for yourself and that matters.

  • 18
    patient-lynx-943

    This hit close to home. After my accident the immediate stuff healed up fine and I thought I was done with it. Then about six weeks later I started having almost identical symptoms in my arm — numbness, tingling, weakness. Turns out the trauma from the impact had caused some nerve compression that just needed time to fully declare itself. It took a few months and some treatment but I did get significantly better. The first few weeks after finding out were genuinely awful though. You're not alone in that panic.

  • 16
    daring-wolf-224

    The delayed presentation of your symptoms doesn't weaken your case — it's actually pretty well-documented in personal injury situations that nerve injuries don't always show up right away. What you want to make sure happens: keep every single medical record, get the specialist to document explicitly that the crash is the likely cause, and make sure your attorney (if you have one) knows about this new development ASAP so they can adjust any demand or timeline accordingly. If you don't have an attorney yet, now would be a really good time to at least consult with one before anything gets filed or settled.

    • 8
      quiet-wanderer475

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 15
    cool-swift-603

    What you're describing — delayed onset of numbness and tingling after trauma — is actually really common and doesn't mean the worst-case scenario is guaranteed. Nerves are slow healers and the compression can take weeks or even months to become symptomatic, which is exactly why it snuck up on you like this. The most important thing right now is getting that neurologist referral moving fast and being really detailed about your symptom timeline when you see them. Document everything — when it started, how often, what makes it worse or better. That history matters a lot for both treatment and any claim you have going.

    • 20
      kind-lynx-923

      Get a lawyer if you don't have one already. Nerve damage that affects your ability to work is serious and the value of your claim just changed significantly. That's just the practical reality. Deal with the medical stuff first but don't leave yourself unprotected on the legal side.

    • 7
      level-sidewalk443

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.