PHI with Drop foot
How does this condition affect your private health insurance?
Hängefüße, or foot drop, is a neurological condition characterized by the inability to lift the front part of the foot due to weakness or paralysis of the muscles responsible for dorsiflexion. This often results in a 'steppage gait' where the leg is lifted higher to avoid dragging the foot. Causes are diverse, including nerve damage (e.g., peroneal nerve injury, sciatica from a herniated disc), brain or spinal cord disorders (like stroke, multiple sclerosis, or poliomyelitis), and certain muscle diseases. Diagnosis typically involves neurological examination and nerve conduction studies. Treatment focuses on addressing the underlying cause and managing symptoms through physical therapy, ankle-foot orthoses (AFOs), and sometimes surgery.
PKV Risk Assessment
Impact on Your Insurance Policy
Duration of Illness (Initial)
Acute onset, potentially resolving in weeks to months with appropriate treatment, or becoming chronic if nerve damage is severe or the underlying cause is progressive.
Duration of Illness (Lifetime)
Variable; can be a temporary condition resolving within weeks to months, or a permanent, chronic condition requiring ongoing management, depending on the underlying cause and severity of nerve damage.
Cost of Treatment (Initial)
Varies widely; from several hundred to several thousand USD for diagnosis, orthotics, and initial physical therapy, potentially more if surgical intervention is required.
Cost of Treatment (Lifetime)
Highly variable; from a few thousand for periodic orthotics and maintenance therapy, to tens of thousands or more over a lifetime for chronic cases requiring continuous rehabilitation, assistive devices, and management of underlying progressive conditions.
Mortality Rate
Extremely low; foot drop itself is not a direct cause of death, but the underlying neurological condition causing it may carry a risk of mortality.
Risk of Secondary Damages
Moderate to high; includes increased risk of falls and related injuries (e.g., fractures, head trauma), compensatory gait leading to joint pain (hips, knees), skin irritation from orthotics, and potential psychological impacts like reduced mobility and quality of life.
Probability of Full Recovery
Variable, from high (e.g., temporary nerve compression, full recovery in 60-80% of mild cases) to very low or none (e.g., severe nerve damage, progressive neurological disease). Overall, partial recovery is more common than complete recovery in many cases.
Underlying Disease Risk
100%; foot drop is a symptom of an underlying condition, not a disease itself. Common underlying causes include peroneal nerve compression/injury, herniated lumbar disc, stroke, multiple sclerosis, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, poliomyelitis, and various peripheral neuropathies.