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Post-Concussion Syndrome After a Louisiana Wreck: How Long Symptoms Can Last and What That Means for Your Claim

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this content does not create an attorney-client relationship with Ikerd Law Firm. If you have been injured in a Louisiana accident, consult a licensed attorney about the specific facts of your situation.

Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.


Key Takeaways

  • Post-concussion syndrome can persist for months or years. It is not simply a concussion that already healed.
  • Insurance companies routinely minimize PCS claims by arguing the symptoms are pre-existing, subjective, or exaggerated.
  • Under La. C.C. art. 3493.1 (enacted July 1, 2024), Louisiana provides a two-year prescriptive period for personal injury claims arising from incidents on or after July 1, 2024. For earlier incidents, the former one-year period still governs.
  • Documenting every symptom, every medical visit, and every impact on your daily life is the foundation of a strong PCS claim.
  • A brain injury attorney can retain a neurologist or neuropsychologist to independently evaluate and document PCS.

What Post-Concussion Syndrome Is (and Is Not)

You were told it was just a concussion. Weeks later, the headaches have not stopped, you cannot concentrate at work, and you feel like a different person. That gap between what you were told and what you are living through has a name: post-concussion syndrome.

Post-concussion syndrome, often shortened to PCS, is a condition in which the symptoms of a concussion continue past the point doctors expect them to resolve. It is not a second brain injury. It is the original concussion continuing to affect you long after the crash.

The symptoms cover a wide range. One person may have two of these; another may have most of them at once:

woman experiencing recurring headaches

  • Persistent or recurring headaches
  • Memory problems and difficulty concentrating
  • Mood changes, including irritability, anxiety, or depression
  • Sleep disturbances
  • Sensitivity to light and noise
  • Dizziness and balance problems

This is where the word “mild” becomes a problem. A concussion is sometimes labeled a mild traumatic brain injury in medical records, but that label describes the initial impact, not your daily reality. Mild is a relative term. It is in comparison to a “severe” brain injury, like a coma or no brain function. It does not mean the symptoms are mild and insignificant.

The functional impairment from PCS can be severe. People lose jobs over it. They stop driving. They withdraw from family life.

“You do not look injured” is one of the most damaging misconceptions in these cases. PCS does not show up on the surface. There is no cast and no visible wound. That invisibility is exactly what makes the condition easy for others to dismiss and hard for you to prove.

If you were told a concussion after a car accident in Louisiana was minor, but the symptoms persisted, you may be dealing with PCS rather than a concussion that simply ran its course.

Research published in StatPearls, NIH National Library of Medicine, estimates that approximately 15 percent of people who sustain a mild traumatic brain injury go on to develop post-concussion syndrome, though experts note that number likely understates the real picture because many cases go unreported or undiagnosed. That means PCS is common enough to take seriously and overlooked often enough to slip through the cracks.

Diagnosis usually involves a neurologist, neuropsychological testing, and a review of any imaging. There is no single scan that confirms PCS, which is precisely why your documentation matters so much.

A broken bone shows up on an X-ray. PCS shows up in the consistent record you and your doctors build over time. For more on the broader category of brain injuries from crashes, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention publishes detailed traumatic brain injury data.


How Long Can PCS Symptoms Last

The question you typed into your phone was probably some version of “How long does this last?” It is a fair question, and the honest answer is: it depends on the person.

Doctors generally group recovery into three stages.

These are general ranges, not predictions about your individual recovery:

Recovery Stage Typical Duration What It Means for Your Claim
Acute Within 3 months Expected recovery path; document everything even if improving
Persistent 3 months to 1 year Extended care required; claim value grows with documented duration
Chronic Beyond 1 year Long-term impairment; future care costs and lost earning capacity become major factors

Recovery timelines vary considerably depending on the person. Age, history of prior head injury, and overall health all play a role. What the medical literature consistently shows is that a meaningful percentage of people do not follow the typical short recovery window. For those with persistent PCS, symptoms can continue to disrupt daily life, work performance, and personal relationships for months or years after the original injury.

Of those who develop PCS, roughly 10 to 15 percent continue to experience symptoms beyond one year. That is a significant group of people whose lives are altered well past the point an insurance adjuster expects them to be “back to normal.”

This matters for your claim in a direct way. The longer your symptoms persist, the more medical care you need, the more work you miss, and the more your quality of life is affected. Each of those consequences feeds into what is fair compensation and what your case is worth. A claim resolved before the full duration of your symptoms is known can leave real losses on the table.

If you want to understand the evidentiary side of this in more depth, we have written about proving mild traumatic brain injury in Louisiana, and PCS follows the same demands for careful documentation over time.


Why Insurance Companies Dispute PCS Claims

By the time you are reading this, an adjuster may have already told you your symptoms are “not that serious.” That is not a coincidence. It is a strategy.

Insurance companies dispute concussion claims because the condition gives them openings that a visible injury does not.

The table below shows the most common tactics and what they actually mean:

Insurer Tactic What They Argue How to Counter It
Pre-existing condition Your symptoms existed before the crash Pre-accident medical records establish your baseline health
Subjective symptoms Symptoms rely on self-report, not objective measurement Neuropsychological testing documents functional deficits directly
Treatment gap Delay in seeking care proves the injury was minor Explain the delay through records; begin treatment immediately
Clean imaging CT or MRI shows no injury PCS is a functional disruption, not a structural one; imaging is not definitive
Surveillance evidence A photo or social media post shows you appear fine One moment does not reflect daily impairment; document every bad day
Insurer-selected IME Their doctor found no PCS Retain an independent neurologist for an objective evaluation

They also use gaps in treatment against you. If you waited a week before seeing a doctor because you assumed the symptoms would fade, the insurer may argue the delay proves the injury was minor. The reality is that many people delay precisely because they were told it was just a concussion.

Insurers frequently arrange their own independent medical examination, often called an IME, with a doctor they select. That examination is not neutral in the way the name suggests. This is one reason a brain injury attorney retains independent neurologists and neuropsychologists to evaluate and document the condition on the injured person’s behalf.

If an insurance adjuster has already told you your concussion symptoms are not serious, you have every right to get a second opinion and a free consultation with a Louisiana brain injury attorney. Call the Ikerd Law Firm at (337) 366-8994.


What Louisiana Law Says About Delayed-Onset Brain Injury Claims

If you are worried you waited too long to act, the deadline is the first thing to understand, and it is the thing too many people get wrong.

Filing Deadlines: Which Rule Applies to You

The prescriptive period depends entirely on the date of your accident:

Accident Date Governing Statute Deadline to File
Before July 1, 2024 La. C.C. art. 3492 (former rule) 1 year from the date of the accident
July 1, 2024 or later La. C.C. art. 3493.1 2 years from the date of the accident

That distinction matters because the date of your accident determines which deadline applies to you. If you are unsure where your crash falls, an attorney can tell you quickly. You can also read our complete guide on how long to file a personal injury lawsuit in Louisiana for more on how these deadlines work.

Many people with PCS ask whether the clock starts later if their symptoms emerged after the crash. Louisiana’s general discovery doctrine may apply in limited circumstances where an injury was not and could not reasonably have been discovered at the time of the accident.

The specific application of that doctrine to delayed TBI and PCS symptoms is not settled, and the clock is generally treated as running from the date of the accident itself. Do not rely on the discovery exception to extend your deadline. Treat the accident date as the start of your timeline and act well before it expires.

Comparative Fault: How Your Percentage of Fault Affects Recovery

Fault rules also changed recently, and the date of your crash determines which applies:

Accident Date Fault Rule Effect on Your Recovery
Before January 1, 2026 Pure comparative fault You may recover even if mostly at fault; recovery is reduced proportionately
January 1, 2026 or later Modified comparative fault (Act 15 of 2025) Recovery is barred if your fault is found to be 51 percent or more

PCS fits within Louisiana’s framework for brain injury damages the same way other injuries do. Louisiana places no statutory cap on general personal injury damages, so the value of a claim turns on what you can prove rather than an arbitrary ceiling.


How PCS Changes the Value of Your Claim

You are not looking for a number you can plug into a calculator. You are trying to understand what actually goes into the value of a PCS claim, because the answer determines how much of your real loss you can recover.

Damage Type What It Covers Who Establishes It
Medical expenses (past) ER visits, neurologist, imaging, medication to date Bills and treatment records
Medical expenses (future) Ongoing treatment, therapy, and testing projected forward Treating physician’s prognosis
Lost wages Missed work, reduced hours, demotion tied to symptoms Pay stubs, employer records
Loss of earning capacity Long-term reduced ability to work due to PCS Vocational expert testimony
Pain and suffering Chronic headaches, mood changes, disrupted sleep Personal account, medical documentation
Loss of enjoyment of life Activities no longer possible due to symptoms Journal entries, witness statements

PCS attacks concentration, memory, and stamina, the exact abilities most jobs depend on. Document your sick days, any reduction in hours, and any change in role, demotion, or termination tied to your symptoms. A reduced ability to earn over time can be a larger loss than the wages you have already missed.

Expert testimony often determines whether these damages hold up. Neurologists and neuropsychologists establish the diagnosis and connect it to the crash.

Vocational experts explain how PCS limits your ability to work. Their written reports and depositions frequently determine whether an insurer will negotiate or a jury will award.

Learn more about the types of recoverable damages in Louisiana that may apply to your PCS claim, both economic and non-economic.


What to Do If You Have PCS After a Wreck

The steps below protect both your health and your claim. Follow them in order. The most useful ones cost you nothing but consistency.

  1. See a doctor immediately and follow up at every symptom recurrence. A consistent pattern of care is the backbone of a PCS claim. Do not wait to see if symptoms improve on their own.
  2. Report your symptoms accurately at every appointment. Telling a provider you are fine when you are struggling creates a medical record that works against you. Accuracy matters far more than appearing tough. Never exaggerate. But never downplay either one.
  3. Keep a symptom journal. Note the date, the symptom, its severity, and how it affected your day. Over weeks and months, that journal becomes a detailed account no adjuster can wave away. Speak to your attorney about this.
  4. Do not give a recorded statement to the insurance company without legal counsel. Adjusters are trained to ask questions in ways that produce answers they can use later. This applies even to seemingly routine calls.
  5. Do not sign a release or accept a settlement before the full extent of your PCS is known. Once you sign, the claim is closed even if your symptoms worsen or new treatment becomes necessary.
  6. Consult an attorney before your symptoms resolve, not after. Working with a Louisiana personal injury attorney who has experience in brain injury claims gives you the best chance of full compensation.

Talk to a Lafayette Personal Injury Attorney

Call Ikerd Law Firm at (337) 366-8994 for a free consultation. You can also reach us through our contact page. There is no fee unless we win your case.


FAQ

How Long Does Post-Concussion Syndrome Last After a Car Accident?

Post-concussion syndrome can resolve within a few months for some people, while others experience symptoms for a year or longer. Duration varies based on the severity of the initial injury, age, prior head injury history, and other health factors. There is no standard timeline, which is why documenting symptoms throughout recovery is critical to any legal claim.

Can You Get a Settlement for Post-Concussion Syndrome in Louisiana?

Yes. Post-concussion syndrome is a recognized medical condition that qualifies as a compensable injury under Louisiana personal injury law. Economic damages, such as medical bills and lost wages, and non-economic damages, such as pain, suffering, and disrupted daily life, are both recoverable. The challenge is documentation. Having a neurologist or neuropsychologist formally diagnose and monitor PCS significantly strengthens a claim.

What Is Post-Concussion Syndrome, and How Is It Diagnosed?

Post-concussion syndrome is a complex disorder in which concussion symptoms persist beyond the expected recovery window. Diagnosis typically involves a neurological examination, neuropsychological testing, review of imaging results, and evaluation of the injured person’s reported symptoms. There is no single test that confirms PCS, which is why consistent medical documentation matters.

What If My Concussion Symptoms Got Worse Weeks After the Accident?

If symptoms emerged or worsened in the days after the crash, document the change with your doctor immediately and contact an attorney as soon as possible. Louisiana’s general discovery doctrine may apply in limited circumstances, but its application to delayed PCS is not settled. Do not rely on it to extend your deadline.

How Do Insurance Companies Try to Minimize PCS Claims?

Adjusters frequently argue that PCS symptoms are subjective, pre-existing, or inconsistent with the reported impact severity. They may rely on standard CT or MRI scans that show no injury, even though PCS often does not produce visible imaging findings. Independent neuropsychological evaluation is the most effective counterargument. Some new technologies, like DTI (diffusion tensor imaging to map nerve tracts) scans in sensitive MRI machines, can provide objective documentation of brain injuries causing PCS.

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