“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Oklahoma City, OK Facial Injury Lawyer

Trauma to the face leave both visible scars and invisible trauma in Oklahoma City, OK. When someone else’s negligence causes a facial injury, you deserve full compensation for both visible and invisible harm. McKay Law fights for facial injury victims throughout OK. Common facial injuries jaw fractures, nasal fractures, orbital fractures, dental trauma, soft tissue injuries, and disfiguring scars. Damage to the face is distinct because facial scars and disfigurement are highly visible and can’t be hidden—causing victims to avoid mirrors, social situations, and public life. These injuries typically result from car accidents (especially airbag deployments and dashboard impacts), truck wrecks, motorcycle crashes, slip-and-falls, dog attacks, workplace incidents, defective products, assault, and sports-related collisions. Care for these injuries can require extensive medical intervention—frequently involving multiple operations and years of ongoing care. Treatment commonly includes emergency stabilization plus years of reconstructive and cosmetic work. Our Oklahoma City disfigurement injury attorneys understand the full impact of facial trauma. We work with maxillofacial surgeons, plastic surgeons, mental health experts, life care planners, and vocational specialists to demonstrate the lifetime impact. We pursue full compensation including medical bills, future surgeries, plastic surgery and scar revision, dental work, mental health treatment, lost wages, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, mental anguish, disfigurement damages, and loss of enjoyment of life. Visible scarring and disfigurement support distinct damage claims—in addition to medical costs, pain, and mental anguish. Insurers may push for quick settlements before the full picture is clear—we document the complete impact with expert testimony. Don’t sign anything without understanding the lifetime cost of your injury—the true value of your case may not be clear for many months. All disfigurement claims is handled on a no-win, no-fee basis—you pay nothing unless we win. Call McKay Law now for a free consultation with a Oklahoma City, OK personal injury attorney who will fight for the full recovery you deserve.

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Facial Injury Lawyer in Oklahoma City, OK | McKay Law

Facial Injury Attorney in Oklahoma City, OK | McKay Law

What Is a Facial Injury Claim?

Facial injuries are among the most life-altering injuries possible. Unlike most other injuries, the damage is visible to the world. Scars, disfigurement, dental injuries, nerve damage, and fractures create lasting physical and emotional consequences. Children, models, actors, sales professionals, and others are particularly affected. McKay Law represents facial injury victims in Oklahoma City and in surrounding communities.

How Facial Injuries Happen

  • Car, truck, motorcycle, and rideshare accidents
  • Facial trauma from airbags
  • Slip, trip, and fall accidents
  • On-the-job injuries
  • Recreational facility incidents
  • Dog bites and animal attacks
  • Violent attacks
  • Equipment failures
  • Surgical or medical errors
  • Construction-related facial trauma
  • Walking or biking incidents

Categories of Facial Trauma

  • Facial bone breaks:

  • Broken nose

  • Eye socket fractures

  • Cheekbone breaks

  • Broken jaw

  • Le Fort fractures

  • Forehead and skull breaks

  • Tissue damage:

  • Deep cuts to the face

  • Avulsion injuries

  • Bruising and contusions

  • Thermal injuries to the face

  • Dental damage:

  • Broken teeth

  • Lost teeth

  • Damage to crowns, bridges, or implants

  • Eye injuries:

  • Permanent vision damage

  • Eye trauma

  • Retinal detachment

  • Facial nerve injuries:

  • Bell’s palsy from trauma

  • Permanent numbness

  • Lasting facial pain

  • Other injuries:

  • Ear injuries and hearing damage

  • Jaw joint injuries

  • Sinus injuries

What Makes Facial Injuries Different

  • Permanent visibility — the damage shows constantly
  • Mental and emotional toll — emotional damage from visible disfigurement
  • Multi-specialty treatment — extensive specialist treatment
  • Multiple surgeries common — reconstructive procedures often span years
  • Career impact — career impact in appearance-dependent fields
  • Function problems — eating, speaking, breathing, and seeing can all be affected

Medical Care for Facial Injuries

  • Emergency stabilization and triage
  • Imaging (X-ray, CT, MRI)
  • Oral and maxillofacial surgery
  • Plastic and reconstructive surgery
  • Dental care
  • Ophthalmologic surgery
  • ENT (ear, nose, throat) surgery
  • Specialized scar management
  • Scar revision surgery
  • Nerve surgery
  • Mental health treatment
  • Lifetime reconstructive care

Who Can Be Held Liable for a Facial Injury

  • At-fault motorists
  • Property owners
  • Employers
  • Equipment manufacturers
  • Dog owners
  • Activity operators
  • Attackers
  • Healthcare providers

What You Must Prove

  • Legal Obligation — There was a duty of care.
  • Breach — The duty was breached.
  • A Direct Link — The breach produced the harm.
  • Damages — The financial and personal toll.

Damages Available

  • Past and future medical expenses
  • Plastic and reconstructive surgery
  • Ongoing scar revision
  • Costs for dental reconstruction
  • Eye treatment and vision care
  • Future surgical needs
  • Lost income and loss of earning power
  • Pain and suffering
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Damages for lasting visible scars
  • Psychological treatment
  • Loss of consortium
  • Survivor damages for surviving family
  • Exemplary damages where conduct was reckless

Special Considerations in Facial Injury Cases

  • Higher damages for visible scarring — visible facial scars typically support significantly higher damages than hidden scars
  • Lifetime care — case value must include future surgeries and ongoing care
  • Psychological damages are critical — psychological injury is a major component
  • Work-related damages — appearance-dependent careers can suffer major economic losses
  • Pediatric facial injuries — pediatric cases involve growth-related complications

Filing Deadline

You typically have 2 years from the date of the incident to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). For children, the deadline may be tolled until age 18.

What Working With Us Looks Like

We partner with all relevant medical specialties to build a complete medical record, account for future medical needs, build thorough disfigurement evidence, capture emotional injury, value cases for both economic and non-economic losses, and treat each matter as trial-ready.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: I have permanent facial scarring — how much is my case worth?

A: Depends on severity, location, treatment, and impact. Permanent facial scarring substantially increases case value.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Zero upfront. No recovery, no fee.

Q: My child suffered a facial injury — what should I know?

A: Child facial injuries often require ongoing surgical care. Surgeries may need to be repeated as the child grows.

Q: My dental work was destroyed in the accident — can I recover?

A: Definitely. Dental restoration is part of facial injury damages.

Q: Will I need future surgeries?

A: Often, yes. Future surgeries are often part of long-term care. Case valuation must include these future costs.

Q: Should I give the insurance company a recorded statement?

A: Never. Talk to a lawyer first.

Q: How important are photographs of my injuries?

A: Essential. Photos throughout treatment are key evidence.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: 2 years from the date of the incident (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Children’s deadlines may be tolled until age 18.

Recovering Damages for Face and Head Injuries in Oklahoma City, OK

Few injury categories combine physical, emotional, and identity damage like facial injuries. The face is the most visible part of a person, the primary medium of human connection. Damage to the face extends into identity, relationships, work, and self-perception. An attorney familiar with these complex cases brings the expertise these distinctive injuries require.

What Makes Facial Injuries Distinctive

The Face Is Anatomically Complex

The face is one of the most anatomically complex areas of the body.

In a small area, the face contains:

  • Multiple bones (orbital bones, nasal bones, zygomatic bones, maxilla, mandible)
  • Soft tissues with significant blood supply
  • Critical sensory organs (eyes, ears, nose)
  • The mouth and dental structures
  • Facial nerve systems
  • Glands and ducts
  • Skin that’s particularly visible and emotionally significant

Healing Properties of Facial Tissue

Healing in the face is distinctive. Vascular supply supports healing but also creates scarring patterns that may not occur elsewhere.

Visibility and Permanence

Facial scars can’t be hidden under clothing. This visibility creates lifelong consequences.

Identity and Self-Perception

Identity is tied to the face. Facial injuries affect how people see themselves.

Categories of Facial Injuries

Facial Fractures

Facial bone fractures.

Orbital Fractures

Fractures of the bones surrounding the eye. Affect eye position and vision.

Nasal Fractures

Broken nose account for many facial fracture cases. Can cause breathing difficulties, altered appearance, and ongoing problems.

Zygomatic Fractures

Fractures of the zygoma affect facial structure.

Maxillary Fractures

Upper jaw fractures. Le Fort fractures are particularly serious.

Mandibular Fractures

Broken jaw impact multiple functions.

Frontal Bone Fractures

Skull frontal fractures may indicate brain trauma.

Soft Tissue Injuries

Lacerations happen frequently. Small facial wounds can leave permanent visible scars.

Eye Injuries

Vision-related injuries can produce temporary or permanent vision loss. Direct ocular trauma sometimes require eye removal.

Dental and Mouth Injuries

Lost teeth, damaged teeth, and injuries to oral tissues frequently accompany facial trauma.

Nerve Damage

Cranial nerve injuries can cause facial paralysis. Permanent facial paralysis profoundly affects function and appearance.

Burns and Scarring

Thermal injuries to facial tissue are particularly devastating.

Skull Fractures

While technically separate from facial fractures, cranial fractures frequently coincide.

Traumatic Brain Injury

Facial trauma often involves traumatic brain injury, with TBI complicating facial cases significantly.

Common Causes of Facial Injuries

Motor Vehicle Accidents

Car, truck, and motorcycle crashes cause significant facial trauma. Airbag deployment injuries all produce characteristic facial injuries.

Falls

Falls — both slip-and-falls and trip-and-falls cause facial trauma. Trip-and-falls often cause specific facial injuries.

Workplace Accidents

Construction site accidents can cause workplace-specific facial trauma.

Assault and Violence

Violent acts can cause significant facial injuries.

Dog Bites

Dog attacks frequently target the face, particularly for children. Pediatric dog bite cases involving the face often involve catastrophic injuries and lifelong scarring.

Sports and Recreation Injuries

Recreational injuries can produce facial injuries.

Medical Negligence

Medical procedures gone wrong can cause treatment-related facial trauma.

Defective Products

Product malfunctions can cause facial injuries.

The Damages Picture for Facial Injuries

These cases involve damages categories beyond typical injuries.

Medical and Surgical Costs

Facial injuries often require multiple specialists and surgeries:

  • Trauma center treatment
  • Facial reconstruction
  • Cosmetic reconstruction
  • Maxillofacial reconstruction
  • Dental and prosthetic work
  • Visual rehabilitation
  • ENT specialist care
  • Brain and nerve specialist treatment

Future Medical Care

Future surgical procedures often continue for years. Long-term reconstructive care can continue throughout the patient’s life.

Lost Wages and Diminished Earning Capacity

Many careers depend on facial appearance. Public-facing professions, customer service, sales, performance, and similar careers can be particularly affected.

Pain and Suffering

Facial pain can be severe and ongoing.

Disfigurement Damages

Facial disfigurement supports specific damages.

Permanent facial damage has profound impact.

Loss of Enjoyment of Life

Facial injuries change everyday activities.

Mental Health Damages

Facial injuries frequently cause severe psychological impact. Depression, anxiety, social isolation, PTSD are well-documented complications.

Loss of Consortium

Facial injuries can profoundly affect intimate relationships.

Punitive Damages

In cases involving extreme conduct, enhanced damages may be recoverable.

Special Considerations for Children

Pediatric facial injuries require careful damages analysis.

Growing facial structures means injuries affect future development. Procedures often need to be coordinated with development.

Long-term surgical needs are often necessary.

Pediatric psychological consequences are especially significant.

How Damages Get Quantified

Medical and Reconstructive Surgeon Testimony

Treating physicians and surgeons establish medical damages.

Plastic Surgery Cost Projections

Detailed projections of future plastic and reconstructive surgery project long-term costs.

Vocational Expert Testimony

Career impact experts establish the impact on earning capacity.

Mental Health Professional Testimony

Psychiatrist and psychologist testimony support emotional damages.

Before-and-After Photography

Visual documentation of the change moves the case from abstract to concrete.

Day-in-the-Life Documentation

Functional impact evidence builds the loss of enjoyment of life case.

Common Insurance Defenses

“The Injury Wasn’t That Severe”

Defense disputes injury severity.

“Pre-Existing Conditions”

Prior facial issues get used against claimants. Pre-existing conditions don’t bar recovery for aggravation.

“Cosmetic, Not Functional”

Cosmetic-only arguments. Cosmetic damage is genuine damage.

“Reasonable Care Was Provided”

Care-compliance defense.

“Comparative Fault”

Comparative negligence.

Critical Steps After a Facial Injury

Get Immediate Specialist Care

Specialist evaluation is critical. Initial facial injury evaluation often requires plastic surgery, maxillofacial surgery, or other specialist consultation.

Photograph the Injuries Throughout Treatment

Continuous visual documentation build the visible damages case.

Photograph Before-Accident Appearance

Pre-accident photographs support the disfigurement claim.

Track All Symptoms and Functional Limitations

Comprehensive symptom tracking.

Track Mental Health Impact

Track emotional consequences.

Identify Witnesses

Independent observers.

Get Medical Records Quickly

Complete treatment records support the case.

Don’t Accept Early Insurance Settlement Offers

Early offers come quickly. Early settlements often substantially undervalue these claims. The full scope of facial injury damages often isn’t apparent until significant time has passed.

Attorney Costs

Counsel handling these cases work on contingency. Specialty expertise is essential and expensive reimbursed from the recovery.

Move Quickly

Time matters significantly for these claims. Documenting injuries through the healing process builds stronger cases. The legal time limit sets a hard cutoff. Engaging counsel right away positions the case for the substantial recovery these injuries warrant.

McKay Law Is Your Oklahoma City Advocate After A Facial Injury

The face is the feature the world sees first — and an injury to it brings a weight that reaches well past the physical. Broken cheekbones, jaw fractures, nasal fractures, orbital injuries, lost teeth, deep lacerations, burn scars, and disfiguring trauma come out of car wrecks, dog attacks, falls, assaults, workplace accidents, sports incidents, and acts of negligence on someone else’s property. The healthcare side alone — emergency stabilization, oral and maxillofacial surgery, plastic and reconstructive procedures, dental implants, scar revision, ongoing surgeries spread over years — can climb into enormous sums of dollars. But facial injuries also come with an emotional toll insurance companies prefer to ignore: the dread of facing the mirror, the awkwardness in social settings, the career impact in roles that require face-to-face interaction, and the loss of an identity victims spent a lifetime building. At McKay Law, we consult oral surgeons, plastic surgeons, dental specialists, ophthalmologists, and mental health professionals to establish both the bodily harm and the long-term emotional impact your injury has produced.

Insurance carriers tend to wrap up facial injury claims early — before reconstructive surgery is done, before scar revision has been attempted, and before the real extent of permanent disfigurement is known. Don’t let them. When you join the McKay Law family, we don’t accept to let your case settle before the whole picture of your recovery is in view. We pursue the highest possible compensation for emergency care, multiple surgeries, dental and orthodontic reconstruction, plastic and reconstructive procedures, scar revision, vision-related treatment, prescription costs, future medical care, counseling for the psychological impact of disfigurement, lost income, lost earning capacity for victims whose careers require their appearance, and the enduring pain, embarrassment, and emotional suffering that come with a visible, permanent injury. Call us now at (866) 679-9651 or get in touch online to schedule your free consultation and bring a firm that recognizes what a facial injury really takes from you fighting for you.

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