2021 ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Code H54.2: Low vision, both eyes. ICD-10-CM Codes. ›. H00-H59 Diseases of the eye and adnexa. ›. H53-H54 Visual disturbances and blindness. ›. H54- Blindness and low vision. ›.
Blurred vision; Hazy vision; Multiple visual images; Reduced visual acuity; Refractive polyopia; Refractive polyopia (eye condition); Visual acuity reduced; Visual distortion; Visual distortion of perception of shape; Visual disturbance, multiple images ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Code R68.82 [convert to ICD-9-CM]
This is the American ICD-10-CM version of H54.2 - other international versions of ICD-10 H54.2 may differ. Visual impairment categories 1 or 2 in both eyes. injury (trauma) of eye and orbit ( S05.-) Impairment level: better eye: moderate impairment: lesser eye: severe impairment
Unspecified visual loss. Reduced ability to perceive visual stimuli. Vision considered to be inferior to normal vision as represented by accepted standards of acuity, field of vision, or motility. Low vision generally refers to visual disorders that are caused by diseases that cannot be corrected by refraction (e.g.,...
H54. 9 Unspecified visual impairment (binocular)CategoryPresenting distance visual acuityWorse than:1 Moderate visual impairment6/18 3/10 (0.3) 20/702 Severe visual impairment6/60 1/10 (0.1) 20/2003 Blindness3/60 1/20 (0.05) 20/4005 more rows
ICD-10 Code for Unspecified visual loss- H54. 7- Codify by AAPC.
ICD-10-CM Code for Visual disturbances H53.
Definition: Visual Loss: objective loss of visual acuity during a finite period attributable to an underlying disease.
If “blindness” or “low vision” in one eye is documented but the visual impairment category is not documented, assign a code from H54. 6-, Unqualified visual loss, one eye. If “blindness” or “visual loss” is documented without any information about whether one or both eyes are affected, assign code H54.
Low vision means having impaired vision that cannot be corrected by glasses, surgery or medication. The most common cause of low vision is macular degeneration, an age-related disease that affects the central portion of the visual field. Other common causes include glaucoma, cataracts and diabetes.
What are the types of low vision?Central vision loss (not being able to see things in the center of your vision)Peripheral vision loss (not being able to see things out of the corners of your eyes)Night blindness (not being able to see in low light)Blurry or hazy vision.
Visual disturbance is when you experience a short spell of flashing or shimmering of light in your sight. The symptoms normally last around twenty minutes before your sight returns to normal. Usually, there is no headache during the visual disturbance.
Category-level tabular instruction at H54. - (Blindness and low vision) requires you to “code first” the underlying cause of the patient's blindness and low vision. Most codes within this category require a high level of detail in the category of vision loss, whether one or both eyes are affected, and to what degree.
DefinitionsMild –visual acuity worse than 6/12 to 6/18.Moderate –visual acuity worse than 6/18 to 6/60.Severe –visual acuity worse than 6/60 to 3/60.Blindness –visual acuity worse than 3/60.
“Blindness” is defined as a visual acuity worse than 20/400, with the best possible correction, or a visual field of 10 degrees or less.
Functional Visual Loss (FVL) is a decrease in visual acuity and/or visual field not caused by any organic lesion. It is therefore also called “nonorganic visual loss” (NOVL). This entity is considered within the spectrum of “conversion disorder”, malingering, somatic symptom disorder, and “factitious disorder”.