Why Vision Is the Missing Piece in Most Concussion Claims

Eye model demonstration in female doctors hand

Your client passed a CT scan. Their neurologist found nothing remarkable. Yet months later, they still can’t drive, concentrate, or walk down a crowded hallway without triggering symptoms. Their employer is skeptical. The defense calls it exaggeration.
What’s actually happening? In a significant number of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) cases, the underlying dysfunction isn’t being tested for. Why? Because the standard eye chart doesn’t capture it.

This post is based on a presentation by Dr. Amy Pruszenski, delivered during a Medical and Life Care Consulting Services medico-legal webinar. Dr. Amy Pruszenski, OD, FOVDR, FNAP graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1989 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Cognitive Science. She received her Doctorate in Optometry from the New England College of Optometry in 1993.

Dr. Pruszenski is a Fellow of the Opto-metric Vision Development and Rehabilitation Association and serves on the Optometry/Ophthalmology subcommittee of the Society for Brain Mapping and Therapeutics. She is director of medical education for the Neuro-Opto-metric Rehabilitation Association. She has been providing help for brain injury patients for over 20 years, collaborating with other health care providers to ensure a coordinated approach to rehabilitation to achieve best outcomes.

The Core Misconception: 20/20 Does Not Mean Functional Vision

The most damaging myth in concussion litigation isn’t that the injury didn’t happen. It’s that a normal eye exam proves vision is fine.

20/20 acuity measures only one thing: whether a patient can distinguish a specific letter size at 20 feet. It says nothing about how the brain processes, integrates, or acts on visual input. Dr. Pruszenski describes it plainly: the eyes are not a camera. Vision is created in the brain, across at least 70 distinct neural regions, not in the eyeball.

“If we take their eyes out and put them in a jar, their eyeballs are just as good as before they fell. It’s the signal between the eyes and how the brain is using that information that is the problem.”

After a brain injury, patients may experience eye tracking disorders, convergence insufficiency, poor depth perception, light sensitivity, and spatial disorientation. None of this shows up on a standard eye chart. These deficits are measurable with the right evaluation, which means they are also defensible in litigation when properly documented.

What Standard Exams Miss

For background on how these evaluations fit into broader injury assessment, the MLCC Insights page covers a range of medico-legal topics relevant to claims professionals.

Five Myths About Concussion That Affect Case Outcomes

Myth 1: If the Scan Is Clear, the Brain Is Fine

The American Congress of Rehabilitative Medicine (ACRM) stated in their 2023 guidelines that neuroimaging is not necessary to diagnose mild TBI. Its primary role is to rule out hemorrhage or structural damage requiring surgical intervention, not to confirm or deny mTBI. A negative CT or MRI does not rule out a brain injury.

For litigation purposes: normal imaging does not undermine a mild TBI claim. Defense arguments built on clean scans rely on outdated medicine.

Myth 2: Balance and Dizziness Mean an Inner Ear Problem

Vestibular dysfunction is a real and common post-concussive complaint—but attributing all dizziness to the inner ear misses the visual component. Research by Clark Elliott and optometrist Bill Padula has identified that the visual ego center (the brain’s spatial orientation system) can be disrupted after injury, causing gate abnormalities and dizziness that don’t respond to vestibular therapy alone.

Dr. Pruszenski describes patients who couldn’t walk a straight hallway. This is not because of an ear problem, but because the brain had lost its spatial map. Corrective prism lenses provided measurable improvement within a single visit.

Myth 3: Complete Rest Speeds Recovery

The standard of care has changed. The ACRM guidelines now state that prescribing strict rest until symptom resolution was once standard. But, current evidence supports a gradual return to activity within 48 hours of injury. Prolonged rest may actually slow recovery and increase risk of mental health complications.

This matters for claims: documenting appropriate, evidence-based activity protocols (rather than enforced inactivity) strengthens medical necessity arguments and supports return-to-function timelines.

Myth 4: 20/20 Vision Equals Good Vision

A patient who reads 20/20 on an eye chart can still have significant post-trauma vision syndrome. If opposing experts rely solely on visual acuity to dismiss visual complaints, that argument does not reflect current clinical standards.

Myth 5: Glasses Only Correct Clarity

Therapeutic lenses do far more than sharpen an image. Prescribing specific prisms, tints, or modified refraction changes the light signal reaching the retina and affects how the brain creates spatial awareness. In Dr. Pruszenski’s practice, lens modifications have reduced dizziness, improved gait, and lowered headache frequency in post-concussive patients.

Medico-Legal Implications: Causation, Damages, and Defensibility

Visual dysfunction after brain injury creates specific medico-legal considerations that go beyond general damages.

Causation

Visual deficits following mTBI are well-documented in peer-reviewed literature and supported by ACRM guidelines. When a patient presents with post-trauma vision syndrome after a documented incident—motor vehicle collision, slip and fall, sports injury, domestic violence—the causal chain is traceable and measurable. Objective testing (such as eye tracking metrics) can demonstrate the deficit and improvement over time, providing before-and-after evidence.

Functional Impact and Damages

The real-world consequences of undiagnosed visual dysfunction are significant and translate directly into damages:

Defensibility of Treatment Recommendations

Neuro-optometric rehabilitation is not experimental. It is interprofessional, evidence-based, and backed by major rehabilitation medicine organizations. When life care plans include neuro-optometric evaluation and treatment, those recommendations can be defended with reference to ACRM guidelines, peer-reviewed literature, and clinical outcomes data.

Case Management and Life Care Planning Implications

For case managers and life care planners, post-trauma vision syndrome adds a recoverable cost category that is frequently overlooked in initial assessments. Comprehensive medico-legal services that incorporate neuro-optometric needs produce more accurate—and more defensible—projections.

What Should Be Included in a Life Care Plan

Treatment Sequencing

Dr. Pruszenski emphasized in the Q&A that treatment order matters. Rule out life-threatening conditions first. Then address the autonomic nervous system. If the patient is stuck in sympathetic overdrive, no rehabilitation will be effective. Foundation elements (sleep, hydration, nutrition, and neurological calm) must precede active rehabilitation. Aggressive protocols designed for teen athletes are often inappropriate for older patients or those with chronic presentation.

For case managers: this sequencing rationale should be reflected in the life care plan to preempt challenges about the timing or pace of treatment.

Practical Applications for Attorneys and Claims Professionals

For Plaintiff Attorneys

For Defense Attorneys and Adjusters

Key Takeaways

Frequently Asked Questions

Can visual dysfunction after a concussion be objectively measured?

Yes. Eye tracking technology (such as fixation stability testing and smooth pursuit measurement) provides objective, reproducible data on visual-motor deficits. These metrics can show baseline impairment and improvement over time—making them useful in both treatment and litigation.

Does a normal neuroimaging result weaken a brain injury claim?

No. The American Congress of Rehabilitative Medicine (ACRM) states explicitly that neuroimaging is not required to diagnose mild TBI. Its role is to rule out surgical emergencies, not to confirm or deny mTBI. Defense arguments built on clean scans are not consistent with current clinical guidelines.

How does post-trauma vision syndrome differ from standard vision problems?

Standard vision problems typically involve optical clarity—can the eye focus light correctly? Post-trauma vision syndrome involves how the brain processes spatial information, integrates visual and vestibular input, and uses that data to orient the body in space. A patient can have 20/20 acuity and still be functionally impaired by post-trauma vision syndrome.

What triggers a referral for neuro-optometric evaluation?

Dr. Pruszenski recommends referral when: visual acuity is normal but the patient reports visual symptoms; headache or dizziness treatment is not responding as expected; the patient has balance or movement difficulties; or there is a suspected concussion or neck injury. Early referral prevents misattribution of symptoms and delays in appropriate treatment.

Are neuro-optometric rehabilitation costs defensible in life care plans?

Yes, when properly documented with clinical rationale, evidence-based standards, and appropriate specialist credentials. Life care planning and litigation support from qualified nurse consultants ensures these cost projections are grounded in current standards of care and can withstand scrutiny.

Conclusion

Brain injury claims fail (or settle for less than they’re worth) when functional impairments go unmeasured. Post-trauma vision syndrome is one of the most commonly overlooked consequences of mTBI, yet it is among the most documentable.

For attorneys, the takeaway is straightforward: if your client’s recovery is stalled and standard evaluations have been inconclusive, vision function should be assessed by a neuro-optometrist. The clinical evidence is there. The testing methodology is objective. The damages are real.

For claims professionals and case managers, incorporating neuro-optometric needs into cost projections produces more accurate reserves, more defensible plans, and better outcomes for everyone involved.