Those sample pics are very inconclusive, but it does look like there is room for suspicion around the left/bottom, possibly decentering - especially if the lens has indeed taken a knock.
Easy to test. First thing - does it feel okay? Are the zoom and focusing rings smooth? Then choose a fairly distant target like a car number plate or road/street sign, in decent light, and focus on it carefully using single centre-point AF. Switch focus to manual to lock it. Set exposure in manual, also to lock it, at lowest f/number, and make sure the shutter speed is high.
Take pictures with the target positioned in all four corners of the frame, then zoom in on the LCD and compare them (LCD on a 450D should be good enough for this). The target should look equally sharp in all four images.
Don't expect it to be very sharp because this is a tough test and it won't be. No lens is ever at its best in the corners. You are looking only for equality. Make sure the light doesn't change between shots, eg clouds blowing over, and be aware that sharpness falls off very rapidly in the corners so the target must always be exactly the same distance form the edge each time. With a number plate for example, look at the letters in the middle, not at the ends, because one end will always be closer to the edge and therefore likely to be more blurred anyway. Consistent and careful positioning of the target is essential, so a tripod might help.
If you have to look twice, there isn't a problem. If there is any decentering to worry about, it will be obvious. If all four look pretty equal, test at different focal lengths and focusing distances - it's possible that it's the mechanism that has been knocked out of alignment and it will only show up at certain settings, eg the ones used above. Don't go too close though, or even slight focusing errors could creep in.