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Ohio Brain Injury Lawyers

Ohio Brain Injury Attorneys with Experience

Despite all the many precautions, traumatic brain injuries happen every day. Falls, motor vehicle accidents, and assaults are just a few of the ways you can sustain a brain injury.

Every 23 seconds, one person in the United States sustains a traumatic brain injury.
- The Brain Injury Association of America

Suffering a traumatic brain injury can be serious and frightening, but the experienced Ohio brain injury lawyers at Nurenberg, Paris, Heller & McCarthy can help you get the compensation you deserve for your injury. We will fight for your rights if you were injured due to someone else’s negligence.

What is a TBI?

A traumatic brain injury, or TBI, is a brain injury that results from trauma to the head. There are two types of traumatic brain injuries, one is a penetrating injury and the other is a closed head injury. Penetrating injuries are associated with a foreign object entering the brain and causing damage. A closed head injury results from an impact to the head, such as an auto accident.

Closed head injuries can result in primary and secondary brain damage. Primary brain damage occurs at the time of impact and can include skull fracture, bruising, blood clots, lacerations, nerve damage, etc. Secondary brain damage occurs after the injury and develops over time, resulting in brain swelling, pressure inside the skull, epilepsy, infection, fever, low or high blood pressure, abnormal blood coagulation, and more.

Effects

Whether in the emergency room or visiting a family doctor, when you need medical treatment, you deserve the caregiver’s undivided attention.

In some cases it can be difficult to detect a traumatic brain injury. Side effects can take time to surface or may initially appear mild. Contact an Ohio brain injury lawyer today if you experience changes in:

  • thinking (memory and reasoning)
  • sensation (touch, taste, and smell)
  • language (communication, expression, and understanding)
  • emotion (depression, anxiety, personality changes, aggression, acting out, and social inappropriateness)

Don’t wait if you believe that you or someone you love has suffered a TBI. We are here for you. At Nurenberg Paris we have a strong reputation for protecting the rights of the injured.

Get Help

If you or someone you love has experienced a traumatic brain injury, there are resources available to help you better cope with your injury. The Traumatic Brain Injury Survival Guide offers clear and easy to understand information you can use to educate yourself about a brain injury. There are also support groups in various offices across the country. Getting help is the first step to getting better.

Free Initial Consultation

If you have suffered a brain injury, turn to Nurenberg, Paris, Heller & McCarthy. Our Ohio brain injury lawyers have won justice for the injured since 1928, and we will fight for you. With offices in Cleveland and Independence, we are conveniently located to serve victims throughout Ohio, including Akron and Toledo.

Fill out a free online consultation form or call us toll-free at (800) 562-7438. Experience matters—talk to the Ohio injury lawyers at Nurenberg Paris today.

Jury Trial Results

  • Jury Returns Verdict of $2,287,000 for Death of 46-Year-Old Due to the Negligence of an Emergency Room Medical Group
  • Amount: $2,287,000
    Court: Washington County Court of Common Pleas
    Date: June 2007
    Plaintiff's Counsel: William S. Jacobson, Andrew R. Young
    Description: Wrongful Death/Medical Malpractice

    After a four day trial, a jury awarded $2,287,000 on behalf of the husband, two minor children, and an adult daughter of a 46-year-old woman who died as a result of the negligence of Marietta Emergimed, Inc.

    On March 23, 2002, the emergency room group of Marietta Memorial Hospital failed to inform a patient that she might have lung cancer. The patient went to the emergency room complaining of cough and fever. The results of a chest x-ray showed pneumonia and a shadow that potentially could be cancer. The patient was given discharge instructions to follow-up with a primary care physician and obtain a repeat chest x-ray. However, the discharge instructions appeared to be the routine discharge instructions for nothing more than pneumonia. A legal dispute ensued over whether or not the patient was told that she might have cancer and whether or not the patient was herself responsible for not obtaining a repeat chest x-ray.

    The jury found that the emergency room group "failed to adequately convey potential severity of abnormal x-ray findings (increased markings) and need for immediate follow up to the patient." The jury also apportioned some fault on the patient for "failure to take responsibility of her own health care." The jury found the emergency room group 90% at fault and apportioned 10% responsibility on the patient, reducing the overall award down to $2,058,300.

    Cleveland - Ohio Injury Lawyer William Jacobson Cleveland - Ohio Injury Lawyer Andrew Young
    William S. Jacobson Andrew R. Young
       
  • $4.1 Million Jury Verdict for Child
  • Amount: $4,100,000
    Court: Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
    Date: October 2004
    Plaintiff's Counsel: William S. Jacobson
    Description: Medical Malpractice

    Plaintiffs' child suffered a stroke the day before her first birthday. The stroke left her with right-sided paralysis and weakness. The cause of the stroke was investigated and was discovered to be moya-moya. Moya-moya is a disease which is characterized by smaller blood vessels than normal, in the brain. In February 1996, the child went to University Hospitals of Cleveland for a revascularization of her brain. The procedure was successful and Lauren showed some improvement. The physician at University Hospitals of Cleveland had asked the family to return to Cleveland in August, 1996, for a cerebral angiogram to check on the status of her brain revascularization. The cerebral angiogram is done by injecting dye into the body's arterial tree through the femoral artery (in the groin area) and then viewing that dye on fluroscopy as it reaches the cerebral vessels. The routine postoperative surveillance for an angiogram includes neurovascular checks of the leg into which the dye is injected. The reason for this is that an occasional complication of this procedure is a blood clot forming in the femoral artery as a result of the interruption of the vessel when the dye is injected. Neurovascular checks include checking the pulse in the foot of that leg, as well as checking the temperature of the leg and the capillary refill (pinching the skin and timing how long it takes for the color to return). Plaintiffs alleged in their lawsuit that the post`operative surveillance done on the child was inadequate and that she was permitted to leave the hospital with compromised circulation in her right leg as a result of a blood clot. The defendant denied this allegation, pointing out that a resident had documented very positive findings in that leg on the morning of discharge. Plaintiffs argued that the nurses had found otherwise and that this dispute between physician and nurses should have been addressed by the attending physician. Two days after the child was discharged from University Hospitals, she returned with an obvious clotting problem in that leg. Over the next seven years, the child had multiple procedures to improve the circulation of her right leg, one of which procedures led to a complication known as compartment syndrome. As a result of the compartment syndrome, the child's right lower exteremity became deformed and the muscle wasted away. Ultimately, in July of 2003, she was requried to undergo a below the knee amputation.

    Cleveland - Ohio Injury Lawyer William Jacobson
    William S. Jacobson
       
  • Jury Awards $2.8 Million in Baby Brain Damage Cerebral Palsy Case
  • Amount: $2,800,000
    Court: Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas
    Date: February 1999
    Plaintiff's Counsel: Thomas Mester, William S. Jacobson
    Description: Medical Malpractice

    Defendant obstetrician failed to intervene in a timely fashion by way of discontinuing Pitocin or by way of c-section in the face of persistent decelerations continuing for a two hour period of time. Apgars and pH were normal and multi-organ system failure was questionable. Child suffered cerebral palsy and is profoundly retarded.

    Cleveland - Ohio Injury Lawyer Thomas Mester Cleveland - Ohio Injury Lawyer William Jacobson
    Thomas Mester William S. Jacobson