<\/a>This is another question I’ve recently received from potential clients.\u00a0 They were involved in an incident — a car wreck, a slip and fall, or something similar.\u00a0 They went to the ER, and the ER performed an MRI or a CT san looking for problems, but scan came back negative.\u00a0 Does this mean that the was no brain injury?<\/p>\n Absolutely not.<\/p>\n While an MRI or a CT scan can find some brain bleeds or some damage, they don’t find most problems.\u00a0 As a result, the vast majority of people who have brain injuries have a normal (what we call negative) MRI or CT scan.<\/p>\n Indeed, while insurance companies sometimes try to argue about claims when you have a normal MRI or CT scan, virtually all scientific literature and all neurologists agree that you can still have a normal scan.\u00a0 Not only that, virtually all neurologists will agree that most of the patients they see (more…)<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" This is another question I’ve recently received from potential clients.\u00a0 They were involved in an incident — a car wreck, a slip and fall, or something similar.\u00a0 They went to the ER, and the ER performed an MRI or a…<\/span><\/p>\n