A 17-year-old was injured after accepting a ride from an intoxicated driver. The driver lost control of the vehicle, striking multiple other cars. The injured person sustained severe spinal injuries and became quadriplegic. The case involved claims against the driver, another motorist, and a bar for serving alcohol to the underage driver.
Spinal Cord Injury Cases in Dallas–Fort Worth
Spinal cord injuries can lead to partial or complete paralysis, requiring extensive medical care, home modifications, and lifetime assistance. These catastrophic injuries often result in multi-million dollar settlements to cover ongoing medical expenses and loss of quality of life.
Last updated: November 2025
High-Level Statistics
A 20-year-old passenger sustained severe spinal cord injuries in a collision. The accident occurred when a utility truck ran a stop sign and hit the vehicle he was in. The defense argued the host driver's speed and the plaintiff's failure to wear a seatbelt caused the injuries. The jury found the truck driver's negligence caused the injury and awarded damages.
One driver was involved in a crash that resulted in serious injuries. The case involved complex medical and accident reconstruction expert testimony. The jury awarded damages for future lost wages, medical expenses, and non-economic damages.
One driver was involved in a crash that resulted in serious injuries. The case involved claims related to future lost wages, medical expenses, and damages.
One driver was involved in a crash that resulted in serious spinal cord injuries. The case involved extensive medical and expert testimony regarding future medical expenses, lost wages, and damages.
One driver was involved in a crash that resulted in serious injuries. The case involved complex medical and accident reconstruction expert testimony. The jury awarded damages for future lost wages, medical expenses, and pain and suffering.
What is Spinal Cord Injury?
Spinal cord injuries involve damage to the nerve bundle running through the spinal column, potentially causing partial or complete loss of sensation and motor function below the injury site. These catastrophic injuries can result in paraplegia (paralysis of lower body and legs) or quadriplegia/tetraplegia (paralysis of all four limbs). Even incomplete spinal cord injuries cause significant impairments affecting mobility, bowel and bladder control, sexual function, and ability to regulate body temperature. The level and completeness of injury determines long-term prognosis and functional capacity.
Common causes in motor vehicle accidents
High-speed collisions, vehicle rollovers, T-bone crashes, and accidents involving unrestrained occupants cause most motor vehicle-related spinal cord injuries. The spinal cord can be damaged by bone fragments from vertebral fractures, compression from dislocated vertebrae, torn or stretched ligaments allowing excessive spinal movement, or direct penetration from debris. Rear-end collisions can cause hyperextension injuries to the cervical spine, while frontal impacts often damage thoracic or lumbar regions. Ejection from vehicles carries extremely high spinal cord injury risk due to multiple impact points and lack of protection.
Treatment and recovery
Immediate treatment focuses on spinal stabilization, high-dose corticosteroids to reduce swelling (if administered within 8 hours), and emergency surgery to relieve pressure on the spinal cord from bone fragments, blood clots, or herniated discs. Long-term care includes months of inpatient rehabilitation teaching adaptation to paralysis, physical therapy maintaining muscle strength and preventing contractures, occupational therapy developing compensation strategies for daily activities, and psychological counseling. Many patients require wheelchairs, home modifications (ramps, widened doorways, accessible bathrooms), assistive devices, and ongoing medical care for complications like pressure ulcers, urinary tract infections, respiratory issues, and chronic pain. Incomplete injuries may see gradual improvement over 12-18 months, but complete injuries rarely recover significant function below the injury level.
Legal considerations in Dallas-Fort Worth
Spinal cord injury cases in Dallas and Tarrant counties typically result in multi-million dollar settlements or verdicts due to astronomical lifetime costs. Key evidence includes emergency imaging (CT, MRI) showing spinal cord damage and vertebral injury, neurological examination documenting extent of sensory and motor loss, life care plans prepared by rehabilitation experts projecting lifetime medical needs ($3-5 million for paraplegics, $5-10+ million for quadriplegics), economist testimony calculating lost earning capacity, and vocational expert testimony establishing unemployability. Cases require testimony from spinal cord injury specialists, physiatrists, and rehabilitation experts. Documentation must address future needs including attendant care, medical equipment and supplies, home and vehicle modifications, ongoing medical complications, and psychological impacts. Texas caps non-economic damages at $250,000 per defendant, making economic damages (medical expenses and lost wages) the primary component of catastrophic injury settlements.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about motor vehicle accident cases in Dallas-Fort Worth
Important: The information provided on this page is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Case outcomes vary significantly based on individual circumstances. Past results are not guarantees of future outcomes. Always consult with a qualified attorney for guidance specific to your situation.