blog home Personal Injury How are Amputation Injuries Suffered in Car Accidents?

How are Amputation Injuries Suffered in Car Accidents?

By Attorney Ray Maples on January 28, 2013

Victims of Oklahoma car accidents often suffer devastating injuries that require extensive treatment and time away from work. Most injuries, such as lacerations and bone fractures, can heal over time if treated properly. There are a number of injuries, however, that could last a lifetime. In some of the most devastating Oklahoma accidents, victims may lose one or more limbs.

The Oklahoma City amputation injury lawyers at the Maples Law Firm understand that these types of trauma are not common, but they can occur any time there is a high-speed collision. The force of an accident can be so severe that the victims are crushed inside or trapped by the bent metal and broken glass. In these types of crashes, it is possible for someone to lose a leg, arm, foot, hand, toe, or finger.

Immediate and effective medical treatment may be able to lessen the damage, but it is not always possible to reattach the damaged body part. Factors that could affect the possibility of reattachment include the duration of time between the accident and receiving treatment, the overall medical condition of the victim, the part of the body that was amputated, and the extent of the damage.

Victims of amputation injuries suffer devastating consequences. Even after lengthy and expensive physical therapy, they may never regain the strength or physical ability they previously had. Some victims of amputation injuries are incapable of performing at work as they once did. Others suffer from depression and a decreased quality of life.

When an amputation injury results from an act of negligence, the at-fault driver can be held accountable for the victim’s significant losses. A skilled attorney can help these catastrophically injured victims pursue support for their medical expenses, cost of rehabilitation services, lost wages, loss of earning potential, and other related damages.