Z98. 4 - Cataract extraction status. ICD-10-CM.
A condition in which the lens of the eye becomes cloudy. Symptoms include blurred, cloudy, or double vision; sensitivity to light; and difficulty seeing at night. Without treatment, cataracts can cause blindness.
ICD-10 Code for Cortical age-related cataract, right eye- H25. 011- Codify by AAPC.
ICD-10-CM Code for Combined forms of age-related cataract, left eye H25. 812.
H25. 13 Age-related nuclear cataract, bilateral - ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Codes.
For purposes of this measure, only the following CPT cataract surgery codes should be used: 66982: Cataract surgery with insertion of intraocular lens, complex. 66983: Cataract surgery, intracapsular, with insertion of intraocular lens. 66984: Cataract surgery, extracapsular, with insertion of intraocular lens.
H25. 11 Age-related nuclear cataract, right eye - ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Codes.
H25. 12 - Age-related nuclear cataract, left eye | ICD-10-CM.
A complicated cataract refers to the opacification of the crystalline lens secondary to intraocular diseases, mainly intraocular inflammatory conditions that include anterior, intermediate, or posterior uveitis.
H25. 812 Combined forms of age-related cataract, left eye - ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Codes.
Senile cataract is a vision-impairing disease characterized by gradual, progressive thickening of the lens. It is the leading cause of blindness in the world today. This is unfortunate, considering that the visual morbidity brought about by age-related cataract is reversible.
There are three primary types of cataracts: nuclear sclerotic, cortical and posterior subcapsular.
The operation can be performed at any stage of cataract development. There is no need to wait until your cataract is “ripe” before removing it. Most people choose to have their cataracts removed when the change in their vision starts to cause them difficulties in everyday life.
When you have cataracts, you'll notice that your vision is tinted yellow or brown. This means that you'll see less, and your vision has become distorted. When this becomes difficult to ignore, it could be a sign that you are ready for cataract surgery!
The National Eye Institute publishes that age-related cataracts can form in a person's 40s or 50s, but they generally progress slowly enough that they do not start to really impair vision until age 60 or so.
How many different types of cataracts are there? According to ICD-10-CM, there are close to 70 — ranging from age-related to zonular cataracts.
For most codes that require laterality, you report this number as the sixth character (e.g., H21.22- Degeneration of ciliary body ), but there are some codes where it appears as the fifth character (e.g., H26.3-, Drug-induced cataract ). And for other codes, you don’t report laterality at all.