Texas Personal Injury Resource
Spinal Cord Injury Claims in Texas — Compensation for Catastrophic Injuries
Spinal cord injuries are among the most devastating consequences of car accidents, truck collisions, and other negligent acts. The financial, physical, and emotional toll is profound — and the legal claim must account for a lifetime of consequences. This guide explains spinal cord injury claims under Texas law.
Free Consultation — No Fee Unless We Recover (512) 763-9282On This Page
Types of Spinal Cord Injuries
The spinal cord is the communication highway between the brain and the body. Injuries are classified by location and severity — both affect the nature and extent of the resulting disability.
| Injury Level | Affected Function | Common Result |
|---|---|---|
| Cervical (C1–C8) — Neck | Arms, hands, trunk, legs, and breathing (at higher levels) | Tetraplegia (quadriplegia) — paralysis of all four limbs; C1–C4 may require ventilator support |
| Thoracic (T1–T12) — Upper back | Trunk, legs; arms and hands typically preserved | Paraplegia — paralysis of the legs and lower body |
| Lumbar (L1–L5) — Lower back | Hips, legs, bladder, bowel | Paraplegia or partial leg paralysis; upper body typically intact |
| Sacral (S1–S5) — Pelvis | Bladder, bowel, sexual function, some leg movement | Bowel and bladder dysfunction; some leg weakness |
Complete vs. Incomplete Spinal Cord Injuries
A complete spinal cord injury results in total loss of function below the level of injury — no movement, no sensation. A incomplete spinal cord injury means some function is preserved below the injury level. The ASIA (American Spinal Injury Association) Impairment Scale classifies injuries from A (complete) to E (normal function) and is used to assess prognosis and guide treatment.
Incomplete injuries vary enormously in their effects and prognosis. Some incomplete injury patients make significant recoveries with aggressive rehabilitation. Others have permanent deficits. The trajectory of recovery — and therefore the long-term damages — requires careful medical expert analysis.
The True Lifetime Cost of a Spinal Cord Injury
Spinal cord injury cases involve some of the largest damages in personal injury law — because the lifetime costs are genuinely enormous. The National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center’s data puts the picture in stark terms:
| Injury Type | First Year Costs (Est.) | Annual Costs After Year 1 | Lifetime Costs (Age 25) |
|---|---|---|---|
| High Tetraplegia (C1–C4) | ~$1,064,000 | ~$184,000/year | ~$5,100,000 |
| Low Tetraplegia (C5–C8) | ~$769,000 | ~$113,000/year | ~$3,500,000 |
| Paraplegia | ~$536,000 | ~$68,000/year | ~$2,300,000 |
| Incomplete — any level | ~$347,000 | ~$42,000/year | ~$1,600,000 |
Source: NSCISC data, approximate figures. Actual costs vary significantly based on injury severity, age, and individual circumstances.
These numbers represent only direct medical costs — they do not include lost wages, lost earning capacity, home modifications, adaptive equipment, or non-economic damages for pain, suffering, and loss of life enjoyment. Total lifetime damages in a severe spinal cord injury case for a young person can easily reach $10,000,000 or more.
Damages Available in Texas Spinal Cord Injury Cases
- Past and future medical expenses — acute hospitalization, surgery, rehabilitation, ongoing medical management, medications, equipment
- In-home care and attendant care — personal care assistance for daily living activities; potentially 24-hour care for high-level injuries
- Home and vehicle modifications — wheelchair ramps, accessible bathrooms, hand controls, adapted vehicles
- Assistive technology and equipment — wheelchairs, communication devices, environmental control systems
- Lost wages and lost earning capacity — often total or near-total career loss for severe injuries
- Pain and suffering — physical pain, chronic pain syndromes, and neuropathic pain are common in SCI
- Mental anguish — depression, anxiety, and grief are documented consequences of spinal cord injury
- Physical impairment and disfigurement
- Loss of enjoyment of life — activities, relationships, and experiences permanently foreclosed
- Loss of consortium — impact on marital relationship
Building a Spinal Cord Injury Case in Texas
Spinal cord injury cases require a comprehensive expert team — no single attorney can litigate these cases effectively without specialized support:
- Spinal cord injury medicine specialist — to establish the injury, prognosis, and future medical needs with authority
- Life care planner — a specialized expert who projects the full lifetime cost of care, equipment, housing modifications, and attendant care
- Vocational rehabilitation expert — to assess the impact on work capacity and future employability
- Economic expert — to calculate the present value of future lost earnings and care costs
- Accident reconstructionist — to establish the force of the impact and rebut defense arguments about causation
- Psychological expert — to document and quantify the mental health consequences
Do Not Accept an Early Settlement
Insurance companies routinely approach spinal cord injury victims with early settlement offers that appear large but represent a fraction of lifetime needs. Accepting an early settlement in a catastrophic injury case — before the full prognosis is established and the lifetime cost of care is calculated — is one of the most consequential mistakes an injury victim can make. Once you sign a release, you cannot return for more.
Central Texas Personal Injury
A spinal cord injury changes everything. Your legal case needs to account for all of it.
Carl Knickerbocker Law handles catastrophic injury cases throughout Round Rock and Central Texas. Free consultation. No fee unless we recover.
Schedule a Free Consultation (512) 763-9282