“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Tulsa, OK Nerve Damage Injury Lawyer

Nerve damage can cause permanent disability, chronic pain, and loss of function in Tulsa, OK. When wrongful conduct results in damage to your nervous system, the law gives you the right to pursue recovery. McKay Law represents nerve damage injury victims throughout OK. The nervous system controls movement, sensation, and organ function—when nerve injuries occur, the impact extends far beyond the injury site. Types of nerve injuries we handle include damage to motor nerves controlling movement, sensory nerves controlling feeling, and autonomic nerves controlling organ function. Symptoms of nerve damage sensory disturbances, motor weakness, chronic pain conditions, and loss of function. Nerve damage is often caused by car accidents, motorcycle crashes, truck wrecks, slip-and-falls, workplace accidents, surgical errors, defective products, sports collisions, and crush injuries. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) deserves special legal attention—disproportionate to the initial injury. Care for nerve injuries may include surgical and non-surgical approaches—and many patients require lifetime medical management. Even after intervention, some patients face lifelong limitations—with consequences extending decades into the future. Our Tulsa nerve damage injury attorneys understand the full impact of nerve injuries—with attention to the often-invisible nature of nerve damage. We work with neurologists, neurosurgeons, pain management specialists, physical therapists, and life care planners to demonstrate the lifetime cost of treatment. Objective medical evidence matters—including nerve conduction studies (NCS), electromyography (EMG), MRI imaging, and specialist evaluations. We recover all available damages including hospital costs, ongoing treatment, lifetime medications, lost income, suffering, and the lasting impact on your daily activities. Many nerve damage victims can’t return to previous work—particularly in trades requiring fine motor control, lifting, or sustained physical activity. Insurers frequently challenge claims involving subjective symptoms—arguing the injury isn’t real because nerve damage is often invisible. We counter with objective testing, expert testimony, and detailed medical documentation. All nerve injury claims is handled on a contingency fee basis—no fees unless we recover. Don’t settle before you know the full extent of your future needs—future medical needs may not be apparent immediately. Contact McKay Law today for a free consultation with a Tulsa, OK nerve damage injury lawyer who will stand up to the insurance companies on your behalf.

Settlements Won
0 +
Million Dollars Won
0 +
Google 5 Star Reviews
0 +
Nerve Damage Injury Lawyer in Tulsa, OK | McKay Law

Nerve Damage Accident Legal Counsel in Tulsa, OK | McKay Law

What Is a Nerve Damage Claim?

Nerve damage is among the most disabling injuries in personal injury law. Nerves are essential for movement and sensation, and damage to them can cause chronic pain, paralysis, loss of sensation, and loss of function. Unlike many other injuries, nerve damage frequently doesn’t heal completely. Many nerve injuries result in lifetime disability. McKay Law represents nerve damage injury victims in Tulsa and in surrounding communities.

How Nerves Work

There are two parts to the nervous system:

  • CNS — the brain and spinal cord
  • Peripheral system — all the nerves outside the brain and spinal cord

There are several ways nerves can be injured:

  • Nerves crushed by other tissue
  • Nerves stretched too far
  • Nerves severed by trauma
  • Nerves crushed by force

What Causes Nerve Damage

  • Vehicle crashes
  • Falls on unsafe property
  • Workplace accidents
  • Defective products
  • Lacerations and cuts
  • Crush injuries
  • Pressure injuries
  • Surgical or medical errors
  • Toxic exposure
  • Electric shock damage
  • Physical assaults
  • Obstetric injuries
  • Animal-related nerve damage
  • Construction site accidents

Nerve Injury Types

  • Brachial plexus damage — nerves running from neck through shoulder to arm
  • Wrist nerve damage — compression of the median nerve at the wrist
  • Sciatica — damage to the sciatic nerve running through the lower back and leg
  • Peripheral nerve damage — widespread nerve damage
  • RSD/CRPS — chronic pain syndrome
  • Trigeminal nerve damage — chronic facial pain from nerve damage
  • Facial paralysis — facial nerve injury
  • Spinal cord damage — spinal cord injuries
  • Nerve compression — compression of nerves causing pain
  • Severed nerves — nerves cut by trauma
  • Crushed nerve damage — nerves damaged by crushing force

Signs of Nerve Damage

  • Numb sensation
  • Pins and needles
  • Burning pain
  • Sharp, shooting pain
  • Persistent pain
  • Weakness
  • Muscle paralysis
  • Loss of coordination
  • Hypersensitivity
  • Cold or hot sensation changes
  • Loss of reflexes
  • Walking problems
  • Difficulty with fine motor skills
  • Incontinence
  • Abnormal sweating
  • Color changes in skin

Severity of Nerve Damage

  • Permanent damage — many nerve injuries are permanent
  • Long recovery time — nerves heal very slowly, if at all
  • Chronic pain — chronic pain frequently develops
  • Function loss — nerves control movement, sensation, and body functions
  • Quality of life impact — nerve damage profoundly affects daily living
  • Treatment challenges — treatments often fail to fully restore function
  • Mental health effects — chronic pain leads to depression and anxiety

CRPS

Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS), also called reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD) is a particularly devastating nerve condition that develops after injury. CRPS symptoms include:

  • Continuous severe pain
  • Hypersensitivity
  • Skin changes (color, temperature, texture)
  • Lasting swelling
  • Reduced range of motion
  • Mobility loss
  • Permanent disability

CRPS damages are typically substantial.

Treatment for Nerve Damage

  • Imaging
  • EMG and nerve conduction studies
  • Pain control
  • PT
  • Occupational therapy
  • Medications
  • Targeted nerve injections
  • Implantable nerve stimulators
  • Nerve surgery
  • Nerve grafts
  • Botox injections (for muscle dysfunction)
  • Psychological treatment for pain
  • Chronic pain treatment

Why Insurance Companies Devalue Nerve Damage Claims

  • Calling injuries “subjective”
  • Disputing damage
  • Pre-existing arguments
  • CRPS disputes
  • Demanding “independent” medical exams
  • Pressuring quick settlement
  • Combing through social media

Potential Defendants

  • Drivers who caused crashes
  • Landowners
  • Companies in workplace injury cases
  • Equipment manufacturers
  • Medical providers in malpractice cases
  • Activity operators
  • Those who intentionally caused harm

What You Must Prove

  • A Duty of Care — A legal duty applied.
  • Negligent Conduct — The duty was breached.
  • A Direct Link — The breach produced the harm.
  • Damages — Medical costs, lost income, pain and suffering, and other losses.

What Compensation Looks Like

  • Medical bills, past and future
  • Chronic pain treatment costs
  • Surgical expenses
  • Physical and occupational therapy
  • Medication expenses
  • Lost wages and diminished earning ability, when the injury limits future work
  • Physical and emotional suffering
  • Diminished quality of life
  • Loss of companionship
  • Permanent impairment
  • Psychological treatment
  • Lifetime medical needs
  • Punitive damages where conduct was reckless

Time Limits to Be Aware Of

You typically have two years from the date of the incident to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Symptoms may develop over time, so discovery rule may apply.

What Working With Us Looks Like

We work with treating physicians, neurologists, and pain specialists to document the full extent of nerve damage, get nerve conduction studies and electromyography, defeat “prior injury” defenses, account for the lasting damage, build evidence of pain and CRPS, partner with mental health specialists, and treat each matter as trial-ready.

FAQ

Q: I have nerve damage that won’t heal — what’s my case worth?

A: Significant. Nerve damage cases typically involve major damages.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Nothing upfront. No fee unless we recover.

Q: I developed CRPS/RSD after my accident — what damages are available?

A: Significant damages. CRPS cases involve major medical bills, lifetime treatment, lost earning capacity, and significant pain and suffering damages.

Q: My nerve damage is slowly getting worse — can I still recover?

A: Definitely. Progressive nerve damage from past accidents is fully compensable.

Q: My carpal tunnel started after a workplace incident — what’s my claim?

A: You may have a claim. Workplace nerve damage is recoverable through workers’ comp; third-party claims may also apply.

Q: Insurance says my nerve pain is “subjective” and not real — what do I do?

A: Don’t accept that. Objective testing like EMG and nerve conduction studies, along with treating doctor opinions, establish real nerve damage.

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

A: No. Call us first.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: Two years from the date of the incident (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Move quickly — early diagnosis and treatment matter.

Q: Will I need future surgery for my nerve damage?

A: Possibly. Case valuation must include possible future surgery.

Nerve Damage Injury Claims in Tulsa, OK

Nerve damage occupies a particularly contested space in personal injury law. Pain doesn’t show up on x-rays. Numbness can’t be measured with a scan. Functional limitations are hard to measure. This makes building these cases distinctively challenging despite their potential severity. A Tulsa nerve damage attorney knows how to overcome the proof challenges.

Why Nerve Damage Cases Are Distinctive

The Subjective Symptom Problem

Nerve symptoms are typically subjective. Pain, numbness, tingling, weakness, burning sensations are reported by the patient.

Without objective findings, insurance companies dispute these symptoms.

Imaging Often Doesn’t Show Nerve Damage

Common imaging studies don’t always reveal nerve damage.

Advanced nerve testing may demonstrate nerve damage. But specialized testing isn’t always done.

Symptoms May Develop Over Time

Symptoms often emerge over time.

This generates temporal causation challenges.

Permanent Nerve Damage Often Cannot Be Repaired

Following nerve injury, repair is often limited.

Nerves regenerate slowly when they regenerate at all.

Categories of Nerve Damage

Peripheral Nerve Damage

Peripheral nerve injuries represents most nerve damage cases.

Brachial Plexus Injuries

Arm nerve network can be injured by significant trauma.

Brachial plexus injuries can range from mild stretching to complete avulsion.

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Compression of the median nerve at the wrist can develop from trauma.

Cubital Tunnel Syndrome

Compression of the ulnar nerve at the elbow.

Tarsal Tunnel Syndrome

Compression of the tibial nerve at the ankle.

Sciatica

Sciatica frequently relates to spinal injuries.

Spinal Nerve Damage

Spinal nerve damage often results from spinal injuries.

Radiculopathy

Radiculopathy causes radiating pain, numbness, and weakness.

Cranial Nerve Damage

Damage to cranial nerves can occur with head trauma.

Cranial nerve injuries include:

  • Cranial nerve VII damage
  • Cranial nerve II damage
  • Trigeminal nerve damage (facial pain or numbness)
  • Damage to other cranial nerves

Autonomic Nerve Damage

The autonomic nervous system controls involuntary functions. This damage affects blood pressure.

Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS)

CRPS is a particularly devastating chronic pain condition.

CRPS develops after injury and produces:

  • Severe burning or aching pain
  • Skin color changes
  • Temperature variations
  • Tissue swelling
  • Skin texture changes
  • Hair and nail differences
  • Joint problems

This condition produces severe pain.

Common Causes of Nerve Damage

Motor Vehicle Accidents

Motor vehicle crashes commonly cause nerve damage.

Workplace Injuries

Workplace incidents can cause nerve damage.

Slip-and-Fall Injuries

Falls produce nerve injuries.

Medical Negligence

Surgical complications drives many nerve injury cases.

Healthcare-related nerve damage involves:

  • Surgical nerve damage
  • Anesthesia nerve damage
  • Diagnostic failures
  • Medication-related nerve damage

Defective Products

Product defects causing nerve damage.

Repetitive Trauma

Repetitive use injuries can cause cumulative nerve damage.

How These Cases Get Built

Comprehensive Medical Evaluation

Detailed neurological examination by appropriate specialists.

Specialized Testing

Electromyography (EMG)

EMG testing evaluates muscle electrical signals.

Nerve Conduction Studies

Nerve conduction velocity tests measure how quickly nerves transmit signals.

MRI

MRI imaging may show nerve compression or related structural issues.

CT Scans

CT imaging reveal structural issues.

Treating Physician Testimony

Treating doctors establish the medical foundation.

Expert Medical Testimony

Medical experts provides expert opinion.

Functional Capacity Documentation

Documentation of how the nerve damage affects daily activities and work becomes critical.

Patient Pain Journals

Symptom journals provide compelling evidence.

Mental Health Treatment Records

Mental health consequences are common. Psychological care records build the mental health damages.

Damages in Nerve Damage Cases

Nerve damage cases can support substantial damages include:

Medical Costs

  • Initial medical evaluation
  • Specialized diagnostic testing
  • Surgical care
  • Pain management treatment
  • Medications (often substantial)
  • PT
  • OT
  • Pain specialists
  • Psychiatric or psychological care
  • Long-term medical needs

Lost Wages and Earning Capacity

Nerve damage often eliminates the ability to perform certain types of work. Income impact claims drive major damages.

Pain and Suffering

Nerve pain is among the most difficult pain to bear.

Long-term pain damages generate major damages.

Loss of Enjoyment of Life

Daily life impacts.

Mental Health Damages

Depression, anxiety, and other mental health consequences are recoverable.

Loss of Consortium

Spousal damages.

Wrongful Death

Where nerve damage contributes to death.

Punitive Damages

Where the underlying conduct was particularly harmful may apply.

Long-Term Considerations

Permanent Nature of Nerve Damage

Permanent disability is common. Even when treatment provides some improvement, lasting symptoms typically remain.

Future Medical Care

Many nerve damage patients require lifetime medical care.

Future medical care may involve:

  • Lifetime pain medication
  • Periodic specialist consultations
  • Ongoing rehabilitation
  • Interventional pain procedures
  • Mental health treatment

Permanent Career Impact

Career limitations are typical, especially physical work.

Quality of Life Impact

Living with nerve damage generates major quality of life damages.

Common Insurance Defenses

“It’s All in Your Head”

Symptom exaggeration challenges.

Counter requires specialized testing showing objective findings.

“Pre-Existing Conditions”

Prior medical issues. The aggravation rule applies.

“Causation Problems”

Defense argues alternative causes.

“The Plaintiff Doesn’t Need This Much Treatment”

Defense argues plaintiff is receiving excessive treatment.

“Functional Recovery Will Occur”

Defense argues the nerve damage will heal.

“The Plaintiff Was at Fault”

“You contributed too”.

Critical Steps After an Incident That May Cause Nerve Damage

Get Specialized Medical Evaluation

Specialty neurological evaluation is critical.

Get Specialized Testing

Neurological testing builds the objective case.

Document All Symptoms in Real Time

Track all symptoms contemporaneously.

Track Functional Impact

Document how nerve damage affects daily activities.

Get Mental Health Care

Pain has psychological consequences. Psychological care supports comprehensive damages.

Don’t Sign Releases Without Counsel

Future damages are typically significant. Early settlement typically substantially undervalues these cases.

Attorney Costs

Nerve damage attorneys earn fees only on recovery. Specialty expertise is essential and expensive reimbursed from the recovery.

Move Quickly

Nerve damage cases require careful documentation from the beginning.

Symptoms develop and document themselves over time.

Diagnostic studies provides documentation.

Future medical care projections build with time.

OK’s statute of limitations continues running.

Getting an attorney involved promptly protects every aspect of the claim while long-term consequences become clear.

McKay Law Is Your Tulsa Advocate After A Nerve Damage Injury

Nerves are the signal pathways that connect every part of your body to your brain — and when that wiring is severed in an accident, the consequences are deeply serious. Nerve injuries emerge from car crashes, falls, workplace accidents, dog bites, surgical errors, crush injuries, and any traumatic event that involves sudden force or compression to the spine, limbs, or extremities. The symptoms range from crushing: burning pain that refuses to let up, numbness and tingling that disrupts sleep, muscle weakness that affects basic tasks like gripping a pen or buttoning a shirt, loss of sensation in hands and feet, paralysis of specific muscle groups, and complex regional pain syndrome that can follow a victim for years. At McKay Law, we take on nerve damage cases by consulting neurologists, pain management specialists, electromyography experts, and occupational therapists who can document the precise nerves involved, the extent of the damage, and what daily life now looks like for our client.

Insurance carriers love to downplay nerve injury claims because the damage is absent from most basic imaging studies — but EMG and nerve conduction studies, MRI imaging, and the consistent testimony of treating physicians can expose the harm in ways adjusters can’t talk their way out of. When you become part of the McKay Law family, we push back against those tactics. We fight for maximum compensation for diagnostic testing, neurological treatment, surgical nerve repair when possible, pain management procedures, ongoing physical and occupational therapy, prescription medications and pain pumps, adaptive equipment, future medical needs, time away from work, diminished earning ability for clients whose careers depend on fine motor control or physical capability, the loss of activities and independence your condition has robbed, and the profound pain and suffering that follows a nerve injury. Phone us without waiting at (866) 679-9651 or contact us online to arrange your free consultation and put a firm that takes nerve damage as seriously as you do on your side.

Video Testimonials

The McKay Law Difference

See why so many others choose McKay Law, PLLC

With over 300 five-star reviews, McKay Law, your local Personal Injury Law Firm has earned the trust and gratitude of our clients. Every case we handle is unique, and every client’s story matters. Don’t just take our word for it—hear directly from our clients about their experiences and why they confidently recommend us to others.

All Our Practice Areas

Scroll to Top