Lisfranc fracture-dislocation S93.326A 838.03 synonyms:Lisfranc fracture, lisfrance fracture-dislocation, tarsometatarsal joint injury, tarsometatarsal fracture-dislocation, tarsometatarsal dislocation LisFranc ICD-10 S93.324A - Dislocation of tarsometatarsal joint of right foot, initial encounter
Patient presents for treatment of a left Lisfranc fracture dislocation. The first through fifth tarsometatarsal joints were dislocated and there was a fracture at the base of the second tarsometatarsal joint. Initially closed reduction was performed to align all of the dislocated tarsometatarsal joints.
This injury can be caused by a high-energy blow to the foot or by a twisting fall. (Lisfranc was a surgeon in Napoleon's army; thus, the name is based on his description of the injury suffered by a soldier who fell off a horse with his foot trapped in the stirrup.)
Lisfranc's ligament arises from lateral surface of medial cuneiform and inserts onto the medial aspect of the second metatarsal base near the plantar surface. It tightens with pronation and abduction of the forefoot. (de Palma, Foot Ankle Int 1997;18:356)
CPT code 28615 would be reported for the fixation of the dislocation with modifier LT. CPT code 28485-59, LT would be reported five times to represent each metatarsal fracture, per CPT description of the code. The physician performs open treatment of a tarsometatarsal joint dislocation.
A Lisfranc fracture is a type of broken foot. The Lisfranc joint is the spot on top of your foot where the metatarsal bones (the bridges to your toes) connect to the rest of your foot. This is a complicated area of your foot.
ICD-10 | Pain in left foot (M79. 672)
64XD for Nondisplaced fracture of lateral malleolus of right fibula, subsequent encounter for closed fracture with routine healing is a medical classification as listed by WHO under the range - Injury, poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes .
The injury is named after Jacques Lisfranc de St. Martin, a French surgeon and gynecologist who noticed this fracture pattern amongst cavalry men, in 1815, after the War of the Sixth Coalition.
The midfoot joint complex is also called the Lisfranc joint. It is named after French surgeon Jacques Lisfranc de St. Martin, who served as a surgeon in the Napoleonic army in the 1800s on the Russian front. He became well known for his proficiency in foot surgery.
Routine foot care, removal and/or trimming of corns, calluses and/or nails, and preventive maintenance in specific medical conditions (procedure code S0390), is considered a non-covered service.
ICD-10 Code for Pain in foot and toes- M79. 67- Codify by AAPC.
M79. 672 Pain in left foot - ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Codes.
The knob on the outside of the ankle, the lateral malleolus, is the end of the fibula, the smaller bone in the lower leg. When this part of the bone fractures, or breaks, it's called a lateral malleolar fracture.
Posterior malleolus fractures are fractures of the posterior segment of the tibial plafond and a common occurrence in the setting of bimalleolar or trimalleolar ankle fractures.
"Bimalleolar" means that two of the three parts or malleoli of the ankle are fractured. (Malleoli is plural for malleolus.) In most cases of bimalleolar fracture, the lateral malleolus and the medial malleolus are fractured and the ankle is not stable.