The outlook is normally favorable after biceps tenodesis. People may experience a loss of strength when bending their arm, but this should not interfere with everyday activities. Individuals should speak to a doctor if they have questions or concerns after their surgery.
Stretches and exercise
KT Tape: Bicep Bicep pain can be caused by a number of issues including muscle tears, pinched nerves, ligament or tendon damage, or swollen lymph nodes – among other things. Lifting too much weight, catching a heavy object, or repeated strain on the muscle and tendons can lead to pain in the biceps.
reinsertion of ruptured biceps or triceps tendon, distal, with or without tendon graft: 24343 : repair lateral collateral ligament, elbow, with local tissue: 24344 : reconstruction lateral collateral ligament, elbow, with tendon graft (includes harvesting of graft) 24345 : repair medial collateral ligament, elbow, with local tissue: 24346
23430This database was queried for patients who underwent arthroscopic biceps tenodesis (CPT 29828) or open biceps tenodesis (CPT 23430) from 2008 to 2017q1.
Biceps tenodesis treats biceps tendon tears caused by injury or overuse. The procedure also treats SLAP tears — tears in your labrum (cartilage that lines the inner part of your shoulder joint.)
Abstract. Total shoulder arthroplasty is becoming increasingly common. A biceps tenodesis or tenotomy has become a routine part of the operation. There are several advantages to a tenodesis or tenotomy.
Short description: Biceps tendon rupture. ICD-9-CM 727.62 is a billable medical code that can be used to indicate a diagnosis on a reimbursement claim, however, 727.62 should only be used for claims with a date of service on or before September 30, 2015.
Tenodesis is a surgical procedure that is typically used to treat injuries to the biceps tendon in the shoulder. These injuries may occur due to tendonitis, an inflammation or irritation of a tendon, or from overuse or a trauma to the shoulder area.
A biceps tenodesis is a surgical procedure that detaches the biceps attachment from the superior labrum and reattaches it to the humerus.
Whether to treat with tenodesis (anchoring the tendon to prevent any further excision) or tenotomy (dividing the tendon and enabling it to retract), however, is a matter of much debate.
Biceps tenodesis is an orthopedic surgery performed to repair the tendon that connects your bicep muscle to the shoulder. Tendon issues in the shoulders often occur in athletes. The goal of surgery is to relieve shoulder pain associated with inflammation and tendon wear due to injury, overuse, or aging.
NCCI also continues to bundle 23472 Arthroplasty, glenohumeral joint; total shoulder (glenoid and proximal humeral replacement (eg, total shoulder)) and 23430 Tenodesis of long tendon of biceps, in spite of AAOS assertions that the two procedures are not bundled, as stated in Orthopaedic Code-X 2016 and the Complete ...
Distal Biceps Tendon Rupture S46. 299A 841.8 | eORIF.
ICD-9-CM is the official system of assigning codes to diagnoses and procedures associated with hospital utilization in the United States. The ICD-9 was used to code and classify mortality data from death certificates until 1999, when use of ICD-10 for mortality coding started.
Biceps tenodesis is a minimally invasive surgery in which the surgeon cuts the biceps tendon from the glenoid and reattaches it to the humerus using sutures and screws. This procedure is more often done with younger and more active patients because it is considered to be more stable, and it carries less chance of a Popeye deformity.
Biceps tenodesis and tenotomy are two surgical ways of treating biceps injuries.
Biceps tenodesis involves cutting the biceps tendon off the labrum, which is the pad of cartilage inside the glenoid, and reattaching it to the humerus (upper arm bone). Biceps tenotomy means cutting off one tendon and not reattaching it, allowing it to heal to the humerus over a few weeks. The biceps will still function well after tenotomy, but there may be a change in the appearance of the arm with some flattening of the biceps.
Recovery from tenodesis varies. Patients may need to wear their arm in a sling for a few weeks, and strenuous activities can be resumed in three months. The procedure carries a small risk of the sutures failing and the tendon becoming unanchored.
Because there is no reattachment, people tend to recover more quickly from biceps tenotomy and have a lower risk of surgical complications like infection. However, there is a greater chance of a Popeye deformity and occasional muscle cramping with a tenotomy.
Biceps tenodesis corrects instability of the biceps tendon due to biceps tendonitis, inflammation of the tendon, which tends to accompany other shoulder problems, such as chronic instability, arthritis, and impingement syndrome.
If the surgeon begins a rotator cuff repair arthroscopically, but converts to a mini-open approach to finish, report only the appropriate “open” CPT® code (23410 Repair of ruptured musculotendinous cuff (eg, rotator cuff) open; acute or 23412 Repair of ruptured musculotendinous cuff (eg, rotator cuff) open; chronic). You may report 23410/23412 with modifier 22 Unusual procedural service appended to account for the arthroscopic work done prior to the open portion. Do not report both the open and arthroscopic codes because the work was in the same anatomic location and same session, which does not support the definition of modifier 59 Distinct procedural service.
Shoulder arthroscopy procedures include limited debridement (e.g., CPT code 29822) even if the limited debridement is performed in a different area of the same shoulder than the other procedure. With 3 exceptions, shoulder arthroscopy procedures include extensive debridement (e.g., CPT code 29823) even if the extensive debridement is performed in a different area of the same shoulder than the other procedure. CPT codes 29824 (Arthroscopic claviculectomy including distal articular surface), 29827 (Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair), and 29828 (Biceps tenodesis) may be reported separately with CPT code 29823 if the extensive debridement is performed in a different area of the same shoulder.
Biceps tenodesis, or transferring the attachment of the biceps to the humerus (23430/29828), may be reported separately, according to CPT® Assistant (July 2016), and is not part of a normal rotator cuff repair.
The December 2016 CPT® Assistant further clarifies that an extensive debridement “additionally includes removal of osteochondral and/or chondral loose bodies, biceps tendon and rotator cuff debridement , and abrasion arthroplasty.” Do not separately report the debridement if the surgeon also repairs the debrided structures. Also, most payers consider the labrum to be one structure, and do not divide it into upper or lower portions for debridement.
NCCI now bundles codes 29806 and 29807, and only allows one per shoulder, per session. Per the AAOS Bulletin, for top and bottom repairs of the labrum at the same session, append modifier 22 to the code to acknowledge the additional work performed. Check with private payers, as well as workers’ compensation carriers, to see if they allow either 29806 or 29807 on the same shoulder. NCCI also bundles 29806 and 29827, and will only allow one of the codes per shoulder, per session.
To indicate procedures on different shoulders, you may use modifiers LT Left side and RT Right side. You can read about this issue under NCCI guidelines, chapter 4.