The neck is one of the most vulnerable parts of the body in an accident. The cervical spine supports the weight of the head while allowing a wide range of motion, making it susceptible to injury when sudden forces are applied. Neck injuries can range from minor muscle strains that heal within weeks to severe spinal cord damage that causes permanent paralysis.
At Rosenberg & Rodriguez Personal Injury Lawyers, we represent accident victims suffering from all types of neck injuries throughout New York. Our attorneys understand the medical complexities of these cases and fight to ensure our clients receive full compensation for their injuries. This guide explains common neck injuries, their symptoms, and your legal options.
How Neck Injuries Occur
Neck injuries result from forces that push the cervical spine beyond its normal range of motion or subject it to sudden impact. Common causes include rear-end car accidents that cause whiplash, high-impact collisions that compress or fracture vertebrae, slip and fall accidents where the head strikes the ground, sports injuries and recreational accidents, workplace accidents involving falls or being struck by objects, and pedestrian and bicycle accidents.
Rear-end collisions are particularly notorious for causing neck injuries. When a vehicle is struck from behind, occupants' heads snap backward and then forward rapidly, straining muscles, ligaments, and other soft tissues in the neck. Even low-speed collisions can generate enough force to cause significant injury.
Car accidents of all types frequently result in neck injuries due to the sudden deceleration forces involved. Motorcycle accidents and bicycle accidents often cause severe neck injuries because riders have less protection from impact.
Common Types of Neck Injuries
Neck injuries encompass a wide range of conditions affecting different structures in the cervical region.
Whiplash
Whiplash is the most common neck injury in car accidents. It occurs when the head is rapidly forced backward and then forward, straining the muscles and ligaments of the neck. Symptoms include neck pain and stiffness, headaches, dizziness, and sometimes cognitive difficulties. While many whiplash injuries heal within weeks, some victims develop chronic symptoms that persist for months or years.
Cervical Disc Herniation
The cervical spine contains discs that cushion the vertebrae and allow movement. A herniated cervical disc occurs when the inner material pushes through the outer layer, often pressing on spinal nerves. This can cause neck pain radiating into the shoulders and arms, numbness and tingling in the hands and fingers, and muscle weakness. Treatment may include physical therapy, injections, or surgery.
Cervical Fractures
Fractures of the cervical vertebrae are serious injuries that can threaten the spinal cord. Depending on the location and severity, cervical fractures may be treated with immobilization in a collar or halo device, or may require surgical stabilization. Severe fractures carry risk of paralysis.
Cervical Spinal Cord Injuries
Damage to the spinal cord in the cervical region can cause quadriplegia—paralysis of all four limbs. Even incomplete spinal cord injuries at this level can result in significant loss of function. These catastrophic injuries require extensive medical care and typically result in permanent disability.
Muscle Strains and Ligament Sprains
Soft tissue injuries to the muscles and ligaments supporting the neck are extremely common in accidents. While often considered less severe than disc or bone injuries, strains and sprains can cause significant pain and functional limitations. These injuries may take weeks or months to heal and sometimes lead to chronic pain.
Cervical Radiculopathy
Cervical radiculopathy occurs when a nerve root in the neck is compressed or irritated, often due to a herniated disc or bone spur. Symptoms include pain, numbness, or weakness that radiates from the neck into the shoulder, arm, or hand. The specific pattern of symptoms depends on which nerve root is affected.
Facet Joint Injuries
The facet joints connect vertebrae and allow movement of the spine. Trauma can damage these joints, causing localized neck pain that worsens with certain movements. Facet joint injuries may contribute to chronic neck pain and stiffness.
Symptoms of Neck Injuries
Neck injury symptoms vary depending on the structures affected. Common symptoms include neck pain and stiffness, reduced range of motion, headaches originating at the base of the skull, pain radiating into the shoulders and arms, numbness or tingling in the arms and hands, muscle weakness, dizziness and balance problems, and difficulty concentrating.
Not all neck injury symptoms appear immediately. Some car accident injuries appear days later as inflammation develops and the body's initial adrenaline response subsides. Seeking prompt medical evaluation after any accident is essential—even if your neck feels fine at the scene.
Diagnosing Neck Injuries
Accurate diagnosis requires thorough medical evaluation. Diagnostic methods include physical examination assessing range of motion, tenderness, and neurological function, X-rays to identify fractures and alignment issues, MRI scans to visualize soft tissue including discs and nerves, CT scans for detailed bone imaging, and EMG and nerve conduction studies to assess nerve function.
Comprehensive diagnostic imaging is crucial for documenting your injuries and supporting your legal claim. Insurance companies often dispute neck injuries, particularly soft tissue injuries that may not appear on imaging. Having thorough medical documentation from qualified specialists strengthens your case.
Treatment for Neck Injuries
Treatment approaches depend on the type and severity of injury. Conservative treatments include rest and activity modification, physical therapy to restore strength and mobility, chiropractic care, pain medications and muscle relaxants, cervical collars for support, and epidural steroid injections for nerve-related pain.
Surgical treatments may be necessary for more severe injuries. Common procedures include discectomy to remove herniated disc material, cervical fusion to stabilize the spine, artificial disc replacement, and laminectomy to relieve pressure on the spinal cord. Learn more about what happens when serious injuries require open reduction and internal fixation.
Compensation for Neck Injuries
Neck injury victims may recover economic and non-economic damages including medical expenses for diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation, lost wages during recovery, reduced earning capacity if limitations affect your ability to work, pain and suffering, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life.
The value of a neck injury claim depends on factors including injury severity, treatment required, permanence of symptoms, and impact on daily life and work capacity. Insurance companies frequently undervalue neck injuries, particularly whiplash and soft tissue injuries. Learn more about how insurance companies undervalue injury claims.
Proving Your Neck Injury Claim
Successfully pursuing a neck injury claim requires strong evidence connecting your injury to the accident. Key elements include prompt medical evaluation following the accident, consistent treatment and follow-up care, diagnostic imaging documenting your injury, medical records describing your symptoms and limitations, and documentation of how the injury affects your daily life.
Gaps in treatment or delayed medical care can undermine your claim by allowing defendants to argue your injuries are not serious or were caused by something other than the accident.
Contact a New York Personal Injury Attorney
If you suffered a neck injury in an accident caused by someone else's negligence, the attorneys at Rosenberg & Rodriguez Personal Injury Lawyers can help you pursue the compensation you deserve.
We serve neck injury victims throughout Brooklyn, Queens, The Bronx, and all of New York. We offer free consultations and work on a contingency fee basis—you pay nothing unless we win.
Contact us today to discuss your case.

