Three Powerful Visual Strategies for Presenting TBI Cases 

Presenting TBI Cases with Impact

When you’re handling a traumatic brain injury case—especially one involving mild TBI—you need more than medical records and expert reports. You need a strategy for showing jurors what your client is experiencing.  

MotionLit helps attorneys across the country present TBI cases with visuals that inform, persuade, and humanize—raising the bar for how juries and mediators understand injury. 

  1. Mechanism of Injury (MOI) Animations & Anatomical Brain Visuals

Understanding how a brain injury occurred is foundational to any personal injury case. That’s why we use high-fidelity animations to show: 

  • Coup-contrecoup injuries 
  • Hyperflexion and hyperextension of the head during impact 
  • Axonal shearing, myelin sheath damage, and disruption at the cellular level 

We tailor these visuals to mirror the actual event’s physics and trajectory, strengthening both causation and liability arguments. 

  1. Settlement Videos: Day-in-the-Life + Interviews

Daily life becomes the most powerful proof in TBI cases. Our videos include: 

  • Day-in-the-Life footage documenting speech issues, memory lapses, and occupational limitations 
  • Family interviews that reveal personality changes, mood instability, and social impact 
  • Expert interviews—neuropsychologists, OTs, SLPs, vocational rehab experts—who explain functional deficits 

These videos tell the full damages story and often serve as a key turning point in mediation. 

  1. Medical Illustrations and MRI-Based Graphics

When the scan doesn’t show it, we help explain it. Our team creates: 

  • Anatomical illustrations showing trauma zones 
  • MRI overlays highlighting subtle anomalies 
  • DTI (Diffusion Tensor Imaging) visuals in 2D or 3D to show white matter disruption 

These illustrations help simplify complex evidence and validate expert testimony visually. 

Case Examples: 

Attorneys Karina Lallande, Esq., Minh Nguyen, Esq., and Lakshmi Odera, Esq. of Nguyen Theam Lawyers 

Attorneys Keith Bruno and Chris Barnes, formerly of the firm then known as Carpenter, Zuckerman & Rowley (now Carpenter & Zuckerman) 

Let MotionLit help increase
your settlement today!