In North Carolina, a normal CT scan does not automatically mean you are “fine” after a head injury. A CT scan is mainly used to look for emergencies like bleeding in the brain or a skull fracture, but many concussions and other traumatic brain injuries do not show up on CT imaging. If you still have headaches or other concussion-type symptoms, you should get follow-up medical care and document your symptoms and treatment, because ongoing symptoms can matter both for your health and for a potential personal injury claim.
If you were hurt in North Carolina and you are still having headache and possible concussion symptoms after a fall, you may be asking what you can do next even though the emergency room CT scan did not show bleeding or a fracture, especially since you needed staples for the head wound.
Under North Carolina personal injury law, the key issue is not whether a CT scan was “normal,” but whether the fall caused an injury and related losses. In a negligence claim (such as a hotel slip-and-fall), you generally must show: (1) the property owner owed you a duty of reasonable care, (2) the property owner breached that duty, (3) the breach was a proximate cause of your injury, and (4) you suffered damages. Ongoing symptoms after a head impact can support the injury and damages parts of the claim, even when initial imaging does not show bleeding or a fracture.
Forum-wise, these claims are typically filed in North Carolina state court (Superior Court or District Court depending on the amount and other factors). Timing matters because most personal injury lawsuits in North Carolina must be filed within a set limitations period.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, you report a head impact with significant bleeding and staples, followed by ongoing headaches and later-noticed neck/shoulder pain. Those facts can support that you suffered an injury and that you have continuing damages, even if the CT scan did not show a fracture or bleeding. The legal pressure point is proving the ongoing symptoms are connected to the fall and documenting the care you reasonably needed because of it.
In North Carolina, ongoing headaches and concussion-type symptoms can still be consistent with a real injury even when a CT scan shows no bleeding or fracture. For a personal injury claim, the key is proving the fall caused your symptoms and documenting the medical care and losses that followed. Your next step is to get prompt follow-up evaluation and keep complete records, and if you are considering a claim, do not miss the three-year deadline to file suit.
If you're dealing with ongoing headaches and possible concussion symptoms after a hotel slip-and-fall, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options, what documentation matters, and how timelines like the statute of limitations may apply. Reach out today. Call {{CONTACT_NUMBER}}.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.