2012 ICD-9-CM Diagnosis Code 585.9 : Chronic kidney disease, unspecified Free, official information about 2012 (and also 2013-2015) ICD-9-CM diagnosis code 585.9, including coding notes, detailed descriptions, index cross-references and ICD-10-CM conversion.
Coding Hypertensive Heart and CKD If a patient has all three conditions documented — HTN, heart disease, and CKD — look to combination category I13 for code assignment. Codes for the three-disease combination are numerically arranged by the degree of CKD and then further differentiated by the presence or absence of heart failure.
It is so common, in fact, that it was addressed by the American Hospital Association (AHA) Coding Clinics in October 2018. In essence, the answer is to report both diabetic chronic kidney disease and hypertensive chronic kidney disease. ICD-10-CM guidelines instruct us to presume these causal relationships.
Thus, if a patient has Type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and stage 3a chronic kidney disease, report E11.22, I12.9 and N18.31. (Remember, for type 2 diabetes also code for any long-term medication use.)
I11 Hypertensive heart disease. I12 Hypertension and chronic kidney disease. I13 Hypertensive heart and chronic kidney disease.
9.
ICD-10 requires first using an I12 code for the combined diagnosis of hypertension and chronic kidney disease: I12. 0, Hypertensive chronic kidney disease with stage 5 chronic kidney disease or end- stage renal disease, I12.
ICD-10 code I12. 9 for Hypertensive chronic kidney disease with stage 1 through stage 4 chronic kidney disease, or unspecified chronic kidney disease is a medical classification as listed by WHO under the range - Diseases of the circulatory system .
uncontrolled hypertension. Code I10 for HTN is assigned when HTN is described as essential, benign or malignant as well as when HTN is not otherwise specified (NOS). hypertensive heart disease: I11. 0 (with heart failure) and I11.
N18. 3, Chronic kidney disease, stage 3 (moderate), N18.
Renal hypertension, also called renovascular hypertension, is elevated blood pressure caused by kidney disease. It can usually be controlled by blood pressure drugs.
ICD-10-CM Code for Hypertensive chronic kidney disease with stage 5 chronic kidney disease or end stage renal disease I12. 0.
I13. 10 - Hypertensive heart and chronic kidney disease without heart failure, with stage 1 through stage 4 chronic kidney disease, or unspecified chronic kidney disease. ICD-10-CM.
The ICD-10-CM code for Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) Stage 3 (N18. 3) has been revised for Fiscal Year 2021.
ICD-10 Code for Hypertensive heart disease without heart failure- I11. 9- Codify by AAPC.
ICD-Code I10 is a billable ICD-10 code used for healthcare diagnosis reimbursement of Essential (Primary) Hypertension.
ICD-10-CM classifies HTN by type as essential or primary (categories I10–I13) and secondary (category I15). Report code I10 Essential (primary) hypertension for individuals who meet the criteria for hypertension and do not have any comorbid cardiac or renal disease. This code includes “high blood pressure” but is not meant to be used when elevated blood pressure is noted in an individual that has not been diagnosed with HTN. Report cases of transient HTN with R03.0 Elevated blood-pressure reading, without diagnosis of hypertension.
But don’t stress; there are a limited number of codes for HTN — only nine codes for primary hypertension and five codes for secondary hypertension.
Coding Hypertensive Heart Disease. Hypertensive heart disease can cause serious health problems and is the No. 1 cause of death associated with HTN. It refers to heart conditions caused by elevated blood pressure.
Hypertension is the medical term for elevated blood pressure — a serious medical condition in which the pressure of the circulating blood against the arterial walls is high enough that it may eventually cause health problems such as heart disease and stroke.
Hypertension (HTN) is a worldwide epidemic, affecting an estimated 1.13 billion people globally and nearly half of all adults in the United States. That’s roughly 108 million Americans, and only about one in four have their blood pressure under control.
If the provider specifically documents a different cause for the heart condition unrelated to high blood pressure, then the HTN and heart condition should be coded separately and not linked via a combination code. In such cases, sequence according to the circumstances of the admission/encounter.