ICD-10 code D72. 1 for Eosinophilia is a medical classification as listed by WHO under the range - Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs and certain disorders involving the immune mechanism .
Idiopathic eosinophilia is a diagnosis of exclusion when secondary and clonal causes of eosinophilia are excluded. Hypereosinophilic syndrome is a subset of idiopathic eosinophilia characterized by persistent eosinophilia (AEC >1500/µL) of longer than 6 months' duration associated with organ damage.
Eosinophilia (e-o-sin-o-FILL-e-uh) is a higher than normal level of eosinophils. Eosinophils are a type of disease-fighting white blood cell. This condition most often indicates a parasitic infection, an allergic reaction or cancer.
The location of the causal factor can be used to classify eosinophilia into two general types: extrinsic, in which the factor lies outside the eosinophil cell lineage; and intrinsic eosinophilia, which denotes etiologies within the eosiniphil cell line.
When you have eosinophilic asthma, you have inflammation in your respiratory system caused by cells called eosinophils. Eosinophils are white blood cells. They're part of your body's immune system, and normally, they help you fight disease. One of their jobs is to help cause swelling.
Parasitic diseases and allergic reactions to medication are among the more common causes of eosinophilia. Hypereosinophila that causes organ damage is called hypereosinophilic syndrome. This syndrome tends to have an unknown cause or results from certain types of cancer, such as bone marrow or lymph node cancer.
Allergies are the most common cause of high eosinophil levels. You can prevent allergy-related eosinophilia with treatment to control your body's allergic reactions.
Eosinophils (basic components that like acids) are dyed red by the acid stain, eosin. "Basophils" (acid that like base components) are dyed blue by the basic stain, hematoxylin.
Eosinophilic diseases are not autoimmune diseases; instead, they are like exacerbated allergies or an atypical allergic response to molecules that most people do not find harmful.
What Do the Results Mean? Eosinophils make up 0.0 to 6.0 percent of your blood. The absolute count is the percentage of eosinophils multiplied by your white blood cell count. The count may range a bit between different laboratories, but a normal range is usually between 30 and 350.
Secondary eosinophilia is also called reactive eosinophilia. It is a polyclonal expansion of eosinophils due to overproduction of IL-5. There are numerous causes such as parasites, allergic diseases, autoimmune disorders, toxins, medications, and endocrine disorders such as Addison disease.
Eosinophilic gastritis (stomach - EG) Eosinophilic gastroenteritis (stomach and small intestine - EGE) Eosinophilic enteritis (small intestine) Eosinophilic colitis (large intestine - EC) Hypereosinophilic syndrome (blood and any organ - HES)
D72.1 is a billable ICD code used to specify a diagnosis of eosinophilia. A 'billable code' is detailed enough to be used to specify a medical diagnosis.
The hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES) is a disease characterized by a persistently elevated eosinophil count (≥ 1500 eosinophils/mm³) in the blood for at least six months without any recognizable cause, with involvement of either the heart, nervous system, or bone marrow.