The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
patient-newt-664

Hit by a car as a kid, never properly checked out — could symptoms decades later still be from it?

This is kind of embarrassing to even post because it happened so long ago, but I've been sitting with this for years and I need to talk to people who might get it.

When I was around nine years old I was struck by a vehicle while I was on my bike near my house. I went over the hood and landed hard — neighbors who saw it said I slid a pretty significant distance across the pavement. I remember waking up on the ground and there were people around me. I had road rash, a broken collarbone, and apparently lost consciousness briefly, though nobody told me that until I was an adult and someone mentioned it casually like it was nothing.

Here's the thing: I was treated at the ER, kept overnight, and then just... sent home. My family wasn't really the "ask a lot of questions" type. No follow-up neurology, no imaging that I know of, no one sat me down and explained what to watch for. My parents basically said I was lucky and to move on.

Fast forward to now — I'm in my late thirties — and I've been dealing with chronic headaches, memory issues, mood stuff, sensitivity to light and noise, and some cognitive things that have started affecting my work. My doctor recently floated the idea of a possible old TBI as a contributing factor after ruling out some other things.

I guess what I'm wondering is: is it actually possible that a brain injury from childhood could have been missed and be showing up in a bigger way now? Has anyone else dealt with something like this — old accident, no real follow-up, problems surfacing way later? And is there even anything you can do at this point, legally or medically?

I feel kind of gaslit by my own past, honestly.

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10 replies

  • 20
    quick-grouse-166

    On the legal side, I want to be honest with you: statutes of limitations for personal injury are usually pretty strict, and an injury from decades ago would almost certainly be beyond the window in most places — especially if you were a minor at the time, because many states gave you until a year or two after turning 18 to file. That ship has probably sailed. BUT — and this is not nothing — if you have a documented medical condition now that's linked to that accident, there may be other avenues depending on your situation, like disability claims or other benefits. It's worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand where you stand. They can tell you quickly if anything is viable.

  • 18
    swift-finch-444

    I just want to say — the part about feeling gaslit by your own past really got me. You were a child and the adults around you didn't advocate for you the way they should have. That's not your fault. I hope you're able to find some answers and some support. Please don't give up on pushing doctors for real answers.

  • 17
    daring-kestrel-266

    If there's any insurance angle here — like if you ever had a claim open from the original accident — be very careful about reaching out to any old insurers to ask questions. Even decades later, anything you say could be used to complicate things. I'd run anything past an attorney before making calls or sending emails.

  • 13
    mellow-bison-090

    You are not alone in this. I had a pedestrian accident as a teenager and the adults around me basically celebrated that I "survived" and moved on. It took me until my early thirties to connect some of what I was experiencing — focus problems, irritability, weird sleep stuff — to that event. The medical system dropped the ball on both of us, I think.

    • 8
      soft-spoken-sidewalk458

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 13
    gentle-marmot-902

    Not legal advice, and I want to be upfront about that. What I can say generally is that the legal piece is likely complicated by the passage of time — tolling rules for minors vary a lot by state and most have hard cutoffs. The more urgent and actionable thing right now is probably the medical documentation path. Get everything in writing from your current doctors connecting your present symptoms to possible prior head trauma. That record matters for your healthcare, and it could matter for other things down the line. Don't skip that step.

  • 11
    clever-bison-102

    What you're describing is actually more recognized in medicine now than it was when we were kids. There's a lot more research on pediatric head trauma and what they call "late effects" — symptoms that either develop slowly over time or get unmasked by stress, aging, or other health changes. The brain is still developing in childhood, so an injury that seemed "minor" on the surface can have long-tail consequences. I'd strongly encourage pushing for a referral to a neurologist who specializes in TBI, not just a general practitioner. A proper neuropsych evaluation can sometimes show things that even imaging misses. Don't let anyone wave you off because it happened a long time ago.

  • 11
    spry-fox-761

    The fact that you're putting this together now and asking questions is actually huge. A lot of people with old, unaddressed injuries just keep suffering and never connect the dots. You connecting the dots means you can finally get the right help. That's not a small thing.

    • 0
      patient-survivor363

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

  • 8
    hearty-fox-339

    Not trying to be harsh, but I'm curious — have you actually gotten a formal evaluation yet or are you still in the "my doctor mentioned it as a possibility" stage? Because there are a lot of conditions that mimic TBI symptoms and it would be worth nailing down a diagnosis before you go too far down any particular road. What did your doctor actually recommend as a next step?