A hypertropia is a form of vertical strabismus where one eye is deviated upwards in comparison to the fellow eye. The term of hypertropia is relative to the fellow eye which, by analogy is the hypotrpoic eye- meaning that is deviated downwards.
ICD-10 code N48. 89 for Other specified disorders of penis is a medical classification as listed by WHO under the range - Diseases of the genitourinary system .
ICD-10 Code for Monocular exotropia, right eye- H50. 111- Codify by AAPC.
H50. 89 is a billable/specific ICD-10-CM code that can be used to indicate a diagnosis for reimbursement purposes. The 2022 edition of ICD-10-CM H50.
The skin on the head of a penis is called the foreskin. Another name for foreskin is prepuce. A redundant prepuce means that there is an excess amount of foreskin – the foreskin completely covers the head of the penis when it is not erect.
The foreskin is the sheath of skin that covers the head (glans) of the penis. At birth, the foreskin is fully attached to the penis. In time, the foreskin separates and can be retracted (pulled back). This can usually be done by the age of about two. Sometimes, the foreskin separates later.
Exotropia—or an outward turning of the eyes—is a common type of strabismus accounting for up to 25 percent of all ocular misalignment in early childhood.
DEFINITION: A sensorimotor anomaly of the binocular visual system in which the foveal line of sight of one eye deviates outward and fails to intersect the object of fixation. The angle of deviation remains constant for all positions of gaze.
ICD-10-CM Code for Exophoria H50. 52.
Vertical Strabismus refers to a vertical misalignment of the visual axis or vertical deviation. This could be comitant (deviation that is the same magnitude regardless of gaze position) o incomitant (it´s magnitude varies as the patient shifts his or her gaze). Most vertical deviations are incomitant.
Strabismus is the intermittent or constant misalignment of an eye so that its line of vision is not pointed at the same object as the other eye. Strabismus is caused by an imbalance in the extraocular muscles which control the positioning of the eyes.
2 Diplopia. Diplopia is usually a symptom of eye misalignment.