PHI with Cerebral circulatory disorders
How does this condition affect your private health insurance?
Gehirndurchblutungsstörungen, or cerebral circulatory disorders, refer to conditions where blood flow to the brain is impaired. This can range from temporary reductions, known as Transient Ischemic Attacks (TIAs), to severe and prolonged interruptions, such as ischemic strokes. Causes often include atherosclerosis, blood clots, hypertension, and cardiac arrhythmias. Symptoms vary widely depending on the affected brain area and severity, potentially including sudden weakness, speech difficulties, vision problems, and dizziness. These disorders are medical emergencies requiring prompt diagnosis and intervention to prevent permanent brain damage and functional deficits. Long-term management focuses on risk factor control.
PKV Risk Assessment
Individual, specialized PHI providers may still insure you, but with a significant surcharge.
Impact on Your Insurance Policy
Duration of Illness (Initial)
Ranges from minutes (for TIAs) to acute events lasting days or weeks, with immediate onset of symptoms that may persist.
Duration of Illness (Lifetime)
Can be a one-time acute event (e.g., resolved TIA, single stroke with good recovery) or a chronic condition requiring ongoing management, especially if risk factors persist or permanent neurological deficits occur.
Cost of Treatment (Initial)
High, involving emergency care, hospital stay, diagnostic imaging (CT, MRI), medications (thrombolytics, anticoagulants), and potentially surgery. Costs can range from thousands to tens of thousands of USD.
Cost of Treatment (Lifetime)
Can be very high, especially if long-term rehabilitation (physical, occupational, speech therapy), nursing care, assistive devices, and ongoing medication are required for chronic deficits. Lifetime costs can easily exceed hundreds of thousands of USD.
Mortality Rate
Varies significantly based on the severity and type of event. For severe strokes, mortality rates can be up to 15-30% acutely, and higher within the first year. TIAs have a very low immediate mortality risk but indicate a higher stroke risk.
Risk of Secondary Damages
High, especially after a stroke. This includes physical deficits (hemiparesis, paralysis), speech and language problems (aphasia), cognitive impairments (memory, executive function), and psychological issues (depression, anxiety, fatigue).
Probability of Full Recovery
Low to moderate for moderate to severe strokes, with only about 10-20% experiencing complete recovery. For TIAs, complete recovery is very high, but they are a warning sign for future stroke. Partial recovery is more common after a stroke.
Underlying Disease Risk
Very high. Common underlying conditions include hypertension (high blood pressure), atherosclerosis, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia (high cholesterol), atrial fibrillation and other heart diseases, smoking, and obesity.