Endocarditis, infective, acute or subacute

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Revision as of 17:13, 6 September 2018 by Ttenbergen (talk | contribs)
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ICD10 Diagnosis
Dx: Endocarditis, infective, acute or subacute
ICD10 code: I33.0
Pre-ICD10 counterpart: Endocarditis
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
    • I33.0
  • Cargo


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Additional Info

Template:Discussion

  • I am pasteing the definition of iatrogenic here:
    • "i·at·ro·gen·ic īˌatrəˈjenik/adjective: iatrogenic: relating to illness caused by medical examination or treatment."
  • If a patient is injecting themselves with illicit drugs intravenously and their prosthetic valve subsequently becomes infected, I do not think the physician or medical system should be attributed with the blame for that infection. The word iatrogenic implies the cause to be from a medical treatment. I agree that this code could be used in some cases if the endocarditis is caused by a line infection, etc. However in the above example, I think we should have a different code to use. This is my opinion.--LKolesar 13:07, 2018 August 29 (CDT)
      • I think this is meant to be iatrogenic because the prosthetic valve was a healthcare intervention, and made them more susceptible to the infection they picked up through their drug use. But I am not sure why the discussion about a prosthetic valve is in here at all, shouldnt that be in Iatrogenic, infection, heart valve prosthesis (incl prosthetic valve endocarditis)? Ttenbergen 17:13, 2018 September 6 (CDT)

Alternate ICD10s to consider coding instead or in addition

Candidate Combined ICD10 codes

Infections

Infections in ICD10 have combined coding requirements for some of their pathogens. Any that have antibiotic resistances would store those as Combined ICD10 codes as well. If the infection is acquired in the hospital, see Nosocomial infection, NOS. See Lab and culture reports for confirmation and details about tests. See Infections in ICD10 for more general info.

Possible Simultaneous Presence of Multiple Different Types of Infection in a Single Site

  • This refers to the situation where there may be simultaneous infection with multiple types of organisms -- e.g. 2 of bacteria, virus, fungus. While a classic example is a proven viral pneumonia (e.g. influenza) with a suspected/possible bacterial pneumonia superimposed, this kind of thing can occur in places other than the lungs, e.g. meningitis.
    • The "signature" of this is typically the patient being treated simultaneously with antimicrobial agents for multiple types of organisms. BUT don't confuse this with there being infections at DIFFERENT body sites.
  • As per our usual practice, we will consider a diagnosis as present if the clinical team thinks it's present and are treating it, with the exception that the team initially treated for the possible 2nd type of infection but then decided it likely was NOT present and stopped those agents.
  • And remember that Infectious organism, unknown is used when the the specific organism is unknown (this could be not knowing the TYPE of organism, or suspecting the type but not having identified the specific organism of that type), while when the organism has been identified but it's not in our bug list, THEN use Bacteria, NOS, Virus, NOS or Fungus or yeast, NOS.

Attribution of infections

See Attribution of infections


  • Put in specific valve affected eg one of
Heart valve disease codes:

Related CCI Codes

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