The Shoulder
The Shoulder
52
clear-kestrel-514

Seatbelt bruised my chest bad — now months later something looks different. Anyone else?

So I was rear-ended pretty hard about eight months ago and the seatbelt did its job — kept me in the seat — but it also left a brutal bruise diagonally across my chest and upper abdomen. Like, deep purple for weeks. The ER did a scan and said no internal organ damage, which I was relieved about obviously.

But here's the thing that's been bugging me ever since the bruising faded: the tissue along that seatbelt line looks and feels different now. There's a kind of raised, firm ridge in one spot, and in another area the skin looks slightly sunken or uneven compared to the other side. It's subtle enough that my friends don't notice, but I see it every day and I know my own body.

I've been to my GP twice about it and both times I got basically a shrug — "soft tissue heals differently in everyone" — and that was it. No referral, no imaging follow-up, nothing.

I'm not trying to be vain about this, it's more that I don't know if this is scar tissue building up internally, some kind of fat or muscle change from the trauma, or if it's something that could cause problems down the road. Has anyone dealt with lasting physical changes to the tissue or muscle after a bad seatbelt injury? Did it ever get explained or treated? Did it go away, or is this just... permanent now?

Also wondering if this is something I should be documenting better for my insurance claim, which is still open. Any thoughts appreciated.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 23
    candid-elk-479

    What you're describing — the firmness and unevenness along the injury line — is really consistent with how deeper soft tissue trauma heals. When the force of a seatbelt compresses muscle and fascia, you can get internal scar tissue (fibrosis) that forms in irregular patterns. It doesn't always show up on standard imaging. A physical therapist who specializes in myofascial release might actually be able to feel what's going on and help break it up. I'd push your GP for that referral specifically. And yes, document everything with photos if you can — dated photos of the physical changes are actually useful.

  • 22
    curious-hare-980

    Not legal advice, but from what I've seen — ongoing and evolving physical symptoms after a trauma accident are exactly why you shouldn't rush to close a claim. The fact that your body is still showing changes could mean your damages aren't fully known yet. If you don't already have someone looking out for your interests on the legal side, it might be worth a free consultation just to understand your options before anything gets settled or signed.

    • 8
      weary-passenger655

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 11
    quick-fox-321

    Stop waiting for your GP to figure it out — they're generalists. You want a physiatrist or a sports medicine doctor who deals with soft tissue trauma, or honestly even a reconstructive specialist. Bring photos to the appointment. Show them the progression. Make them explain in writing what they think is happening. Your GP giving you a shrug twice is not a diagnosis.

  • 11
    sharp-sparrow-620

    I'd be so frustrated in your position — you know something is off and you're just being brushed off. Trust your gut. You know your body. Keep pushing until someone actually takes it seriously and gives you a real explanation.

  • 9
    mellow-wolf-507

    Please please please document this carefully and don't let the adjuster close your claim before you have real answers. Insurers love to settle soft tissue cases fast and cheap before the full picture emerges. If your body is still showing changes eight months out, that's not a closed chapter.

  • 9
    genuine-otter-350

    Two things worth knowing: first, most states have a statute of limitations for personal injury claims that runs from the date of the accident, so if your claim is still open or you haven't filed suit, keep an eye on that timeline. Second, the ongoing physical changes you're describing would typically be considered part of your damages — it's not just about the initial injury. Getting a specialist (a physiatrist or plastic surgeon experienced in trauma) to document and explain the tissue changes in writing could really matter for your claim.

    • 3
      tired-neighbor510

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 8
    quick-grouse-392

    Honestly, when I was on the other side of these claims, cases where the physical presentation changed over time were the ones that were hardest to value early — and adjusters know that. If your claim is still open, do not agree to a final settlement until you have a clear medical opinion on what this tissue change actually is and whether it's permanent. Once you sign a release, that's it. You can't come back later even if something turns out to be more serious.

    • 9
      calm-neighbor466

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 7
    wise-dove-524

    Yes! I had something really similar after a T-bone accident a couple years back. The seatbelt left a mark across my shoulder and ribs and even after everything healed on the surface, there was this weird hardness underneath for a long time. My doctor eventually said it was scar tissue forming in the deeper layers. It did soften up over time but it took way longer than I expected — like over a year. Definitely push for a follow-up with an actual specialist, not just your GP.

    • 10
      steady-rider227

      How long did it end up taking in your case?