ICD-10 Code Information
Revision | 10TH REVISION |
Revision | Defines ICD code revision (“10th Revisio ... |
Code | N938 |
Code | ICD-10-CM or ICD-10-PCS code value. Note ... |
Dotted Code | N93.8 |
R938 (Diagnosis) Abnormal findings on diagnostic imaging of body structures (Abnormal findings on diagnostic imaging of other specified body structures) You can get information about the “R938” ICD-10 code in TXT format. R938 (ICD-10) code mapping to the ICD-9 : R938 ICD-10 ⇄ ICD-9 MAPPING .
2016 2017 2018 2019 Billable/Specific Code Female Dx N93.9 is a billable/specific ICD-10-CM code that can be used to indicate a diagnosis for reimbursement purposes. The 2018/2019 edition of ICD-10-CM N93.9 became effective on October 1, 2018. This is the American ICD-10-CM version of N93.9 - other international versions of ICD-10 N93.9 may differ.
204 Respiratory signs and symptoms. Diagnosis Index entries containing back-references to R91.8: ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Code R91.1 ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Code R91.1 Shadow, lung R91.8 ICD-10-CM Codes Adjacent To R91.8 Reimbursement claims with a date of service on or after October 1, 2015 require the use of ICD-10-CM codes.
R938 (ICD-10) code mapping to the ICD-9 : R938 ICD-10 ⇄ ICD-9 MAPPING . ICD-10-CM or ICD-10-PCS code value.
8 Other specified abnormal uterine and vaginal bleeding.
It's a combination of two different conditions: menorrhagia, which is heavy bleeding during your period, and metrorrhagia, which is when your period lasts more than seven days or you have spotting between periods.
ICD-10-CM Code for Abnormal uterine and vaginal bleeding, unspecified N93. 9.
How is DUB diagnosed?Ultrasound. Your doctor may recommend an ultrasound to view your reproductive organs. ... Blood tests. Blood tests are used to measure your hormone levels and your complete blood count. ... Endometrial biopsy.
Menometrorrhagia is a condition marked by abnormally heavy, prolonged, and irregular uterine bleeding. Women with this condition usually bleed more than 80 ml, or 3 ounces, during a menstrual cycle. The bleeding is also unexpected and frequent.
What causes menorrhagia? During your menstrual cycle, if an egg is not fertilized, the uterine lining breaks down, and bleeds. The egg and the uterine lining are then shed during your period. Hormone problems or conditions that affect the uterus can result in heavy bleeding.
ICD-10 code: N95. 0 Postmenopausal bleeding | gesund.bund.de.
O26. 851 - Spotting complicating pregnancy, first trimester. ICD-10-CM.
This abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB) may have various causes, some of them benign. But when AUB is related to changes in hormones that directly affect the menstruation cycle, the condition is called dysfunctional uterine bleeding (DUB).
In most cases, postmenopausal bleeding is caused by issues such as endometrial atrophy (a thinning of the uterine lining), vaginal atrophy, fibroids, or endometrial polyps. The bleeding could also be a sign of endometrial cancer—a malignancy of the uterine lining, but only in a small number of cases.
Ovulatory dysfunction (AUB-O)—abnormal bleeding because you are not ovulating regularly. Endometrial (AUB-E)—abnormal bleeding because of a problem with the lining of your uterus like an infection. Iatrogenic (AUB-I)—abnormal bleeding because of a medication you are taking.
Example. The ICD-10 code H40.2232 represents bilateral chronic angle-closure glaucoma, moderate stage. Breaking that down, H40.22 represents chronic angle-closure glaucoma, the 3 in the sixth position indicates that it is bilateral, and the 2 in the seventh position represents that it is moderate stage.
Example. A patient presents with a complaint of pain in the right eye for two hours. A corneal abrasion is diagnosed. The code is S05.01 Injury of conjunctiva and corneal abrasion without foreign body, right eye. That code’s entry in the Tabular List instructs you to add a seventh character—A, D, or S. Since S05.01 is only five characters long, use X as a placeholder in the sixth position. In the seventh position, add A to indicate an initial encounter—S05.01XA. When the patient is seen in follow-up, use code S05.01XD. If the patient develops a recurrent erosion as a result of the abrasion, use code S05.01XS.
Example. If the diagnosis is primary open-angle glaucoma, severe stage, in the right eye, submit H40.11X3. While some glaucoma codes require you to indicate laterality (using the sixth character), that’s not the case with H40.11. But you are required to indicate staging, which is done with the seventh character, so you need to use X as a placeholder.
The Alphabetical Index of diagnostic terms (plus their corresponding ICD-10 codes) lists thousands of “main terms” alphabetically. Under each of those main terms, there is often a sublist of more-detailed terms—for instance, “Cataract” has a sublist of 84 terms. However, the Alphabetical Index doesn’t include coding instructions, which are in the Tabular List.
1 implementation of ICD-10, EyeNet is providing an overview of the five-step process for finding ICD-10 codes (see below), along with a series of subspecialty-specific Savvy Coders, starting next month with cataract.
Example. H11.1 Conjunctival degenerations and deposits has an Excludes2 note that lists H11.81 Pseudopterygium. This means that ICD-10 doesn’t include pseudopterygium as part of any condition represented by the H11.1- codes, but it is possible for a patient to have both at the same time—and if that’s the case with your patient, you would submit the relevant H11.1- code along with H11.81.