Hemorrhage, due to anticoagulant or thrombolytic drug: Difference between revisions

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{{ICD10 transition status
{{ICD10 transition status
| OldDxArticle =Retroperitoneal Bleed| CurrentStatus = freshly automatically generated article
| OldDxArticle =Complication of anticoagulation therapy
| CurrentStatus = reconciled
| InitialEditorAssigned = Elaine Nagy
| InitialEditorAssigned = Elaine Nagy
| MinimumCombinedCodes =2
}}
}}
{{ICD10 dx
{{ICD10 dx
| MinimumCombinedCodes =
| ICD10 Code=D68.3
| ICD10 Code=D68.3
| BugRequired=  
| BugRequired=  
}}
}}
{{ICD10 category|Iatrogenic}}{{ICD10 category|Hemorrhage}}{{ICD10 category| Heme/immunology}}


{{ICD10 category|Neoplastic}}
== Additional Info ==
== Additional Info ==
*For someone on an anticoagulant drug, it's always a judgement call to decide if the bleed is due to the drug.
**For the "old" anticoagulants, such as iv heparin and coumadin, it's relatively simple -- see if the PT, PTT or INR are elevated and if so then we'd typically say "yes".
**But for the new anticoagulants that don't raise the PT, PTT or INR it's HARD --- and you need to make a judgement.  The truth is that most of the time the answer will be "probably", in that it's very hard to know whether that person would have had that bleed without the drug.  So, unless the medical team feels that that bleed is NOT likely related (either primarily OR even as a secondary contributing factor) to the anticoagulant, you SHOULD link this code to the code for whatever was bleeding (e.g. GI bleed).


== Alternate ICD10s to consider coding instead or in addition ==
{{ListICD10Category | categoryName = Hemorrhage}}


== Alternate ICD10s to consider coding instead or in addition ==
== Candidate [[Combined ICD10 codes]] ==
(turn these into links to the actual diagnosis articles if possible. For some that might make no sense.)


== Related CCI Codes ==


== Candidate [[Combined ICD10 codes]] ==
{{Data Integrity Check List}}
(put links to likely candidates coded with this one, eg. a cause for a trauma.)


== Related Articles ==
== Related Articles ==
{{Related Articles}}
{{Related Articles}}


{{ICD10 footer}}
{{ICD10 footer}}
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Latest revision as of 17:12, 2019 January 9

ICD10 Diagnosis
Dx: Hemorrhage, due to anticoagulant or thrombolytic drug
ICD10 code: D68.3
Pre-ICD10 counterpart: Complication of anticoagulation therapy
Charlson/ALERT Scale: none
APACHE Como Component: none
APACHE Acute Component: none
Start Date:
Stop Date:
External ICD10 Documentation

This diagnosis is a part of ICD10 collection.

  • SMW
    • 2019-01-01
    • 2999-12-31
    • D68.3
  • Cargo


  • Categories
  • SMW
  • Cargo


  • Categories
  • SMW
  • Cargo


  • Categories
  • SMW
  • Cargo


  • Categories

Additional Info

  • For someone on an anticoagulant drug, it's always a judgement call to decide if the bleed is due to the drug.
    • For the "old" anticoagulants, such as iv heparin and coumadin, it's relatively simple -- see if the PT, PTT or INR are elevated and if so then we'd typically say "yes".
    • But for the new anticoagulants that don't raise the PT, PTT or INR it's HARD --- and you need to make a judgement. The truth is that most of the time the answer will be "probably", in that it's very hard to know whether that person would have had that bleed without the drug. So, unless the medical team feels that that bleed is NOT likely related (either primarily OR even as a secondary contributing factor) to the anticoagulant, you SHOULD link this code to the code for whatever was bleeding (e.g. GI bleed).

Alternate ICD10s to consider coding instead or in addition

Hemorrhage codes:

Candidate Combined ICD10 codes

Related CCI Codes

Data Integrity Checks (automatic list)

none found

Related Articles

Related articles:


Show all ICD10 Subcategories

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