PHI with Accessory nerve palsy
How does this condition affect your private health insurance?
Akzessoriusparese, or accessory nerve palsy, is a condition characterized by dysfunction of the eleventh cranial nerve, leading to weakness or paralysis of the sternocleidomastoid and trapezius muscles. This results in impaired shoulder elevation (shrugging), difficulty rotating the head, and often a drooping shoulder or scapular winging. Causes vary, frequently stemming from iatrogenic injury during neck surgery, trauma, or sometimes tumors or infections. Patients experience reduced range of motion, chronic pain, and significant functional limitations in daily activities. Diagnosis involves clinical examination and electrophysiological studies. Treatment focuses on physical therapy and, in some cases, surgical intervention to repair or decompress the nerve, aiming to restore function and alleviate symptoms.
PKV Risk Assessment
However, some specialized PHI providers may insure you with a surcharge of up to 15%.
Impact on Your Insurance Policy
Duration of Illness (Initial)
Symptoms are typically immediate post-injury or onset and can persist for weeks to months, or indefinitely without intervention.
Duration of Illness (Lifetime)
Can be a one-time event with recovery, but often results in chronic impairment if nerve damage is significant or recovery is incomplete, requiring long-term management.
Cost of Treatment (Initial)
Ranges from several hundred to several thousand USD for diagnosis (neurological exam, EMG) and initial physical therapy; surgical intervention can be significantly higher, often tens of thousands USD.
Cost of Treatment (Lifetime)
Can range from several thousand to tens of thousands USD over a lifetime, especially if long-term physical therapy, pain management, or multiple surgical interventions are required.
Mortality Rate
Extremely low (<1%). Akzessoriusparese itself is not life-threatening; death would only occur if an underlying severe cause (e.g., extensive trauma, aggressive tumor) is life-threatening.
Risk of Secondary Damages
High (50-80%). Patients frequently experience chronic shoulder pain, significant functional disability (e.g., difficulty lifting objects, overhead activities), reduced quality of life, and potential psychological impacts due to functional limitations and cosmetic changes (drooping shoulder).
Probability of Full Recovery
Variable (20-60%). Complete recovery is possible, especially with mild injury or successful early surgical repair, but often some residual weakness or disability persists. Recovery can take months to years.
Underlying Disease Risk
Moderate (10-30%). Akzessoriusparese is often a secondary condition, resulting from surgery (e.g., lymph node dissection for cancer), trauma, or in rarer cases, as a symptom of a tumor (e.g., schwannoma, metastatic disease) or inflammatory conditions affecting the nerve.