PHI with accessory nerve palsy
How does this condition affect your private health insurance?
Akzessorius Lähmung, or Accessory Nerve Palsy, is a condition involving damage to the spinal accessory nerve (cranial nerve XI), impairing the sternocleidomastoid and trapezius muscles. This results in significant weakness or paralysis of shoulder movement, making actions like shrugging, rotating the head, and lifting the arm difficult. Patients often experience a dropped shoulder, scapular winging, and chronic pain. Common causes include iatrogenic injury during neck surgery (e.g., lymph node biopsy, carotid endarterectomy), direct trauma, or tumor compression. Diagnosis involves clinical evaluation and electrophysiological studies. The functional limitations severely impact daily activities and quality of life, often requiring extensive physical therapy and potentially surgical intervention like nerve repair or tendon transfers.
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)
Immediate onset of symptoms following injury; recovery, if possible, can take months to years, or it may be permanent.
Duration of Illness (Lifetime)
Can be a one-time event with full recovery, or a chronic condition leading to permanent disability if nerve damage is irreversible.
Cost of Treatment (Initial)
USD 3,000 - USD 30,000+ (includes diagnostics, specialist consultations, possible surgery, and initial physical therapy).
Cost of Treatment (Lifetime)
USD 5,000 - USD 100,000+ (depending on the need for long-term physical therapy, pain management, and potential additional surgeries or adaptive equipment).
Mortality Rate
Extremely low; accessory nerve palsy is not directly life-threatening.
Risk of Secondary Damages
High. Includes chronic shoulder pain, significant functional disability of the arm and shoulder, muscle atrophy, and potential psychological distress due to impaired function and visible deformities (e.g., scapular winging).
Probability of Full Recovery
Variable (30-70%), highly dependent on the cause, extent of nerve damage (e.g., neuropraxia vs. neurotmesis), and timeliness/success of intervention (surgical or conservative). Complete recovery without consequences is not always achieved.
Underlying Disease Risk
Moderate. Often associated with iatrogenic injury (e.g., post-surgical complication), direct neck trauma, or sometimes due to compressive tumors or idiopathic inflammatory neuropathies. Not typically indicative of broad systemic underlying diseases.