Medical testimony fails when jurors cannot see what the expert is describing. An orthopedic surgeon explaining a multi-level lumbar fusion is perfectly clear to another surgeon. To a jury, it is a sequence of unfamiliar words. The expert loses the room not because the testimony is wrong, but because the audience cannot build a mental picture fast enough to keep up.
Medical animation solves this by giving the jury the picture before the words arrive. When the expert says “the pedicle screw was placed at L4-L5,” jurors who have already seen the anatomy in motion understand immediately. They retain the information. They can recall it during deliberation. Without the visual, they are guessing — or simplifying in ways that may not serve your case.
Surgical procedures — step-by-step visualization of the operative approach, instruments, and technique. We work from operative reports, medical records, and direct consultation with your medical experts to ensure accuracy down to the specific hardware, incision site, and surgical sequence used in your client’s case.
Mechanisms of injury — how force traveled through the body, what structures were damaged, and why. Biomechanical mechanisms that are invisible in a static X-ray or MRI become intuitive when shown in motion: disc herniation under compressive load, ligament failure under torsion, vascular compromise from blunt trauma.
Disease and condition progression — showing how a condition developed over time, how treatment altered its course, or how delayed diagnosis allowed deterioration. These animations are particularly effective for medical malpractice cases where the central question is what would have happened with timely intervention.
Anatomical education — baseline anatomy that orients the jury before testimony begins. When jurors understand normal anatomy, deviations become meaningful. Without that foundation, injury descriptions are abstractions.
We convert your client’s actual diagnostic imaging — CT scans, MRIs — into three-dimensional models. This means the jury sees your client’s anatomy, not a generic textbook illustration. The evidentiary foundation is stronger because the visual is derived directly from the medical record.
Every medical animation is built to withstand challenge. We document our reference sources, maintain version histories, and can provide the evidentiary foundation needed to address Rule 403, 901, and 702 objections. We understand the distinction between demonstrative and substantive evidence and build accordingly.