Solvent (organic, inhaled or ingested), withdrawal
ICD10 Diagnosis | |
Dx: | Solvent (organic, inhaled or ingested), withdrawal |
ICD10 code: | F18.3 |
Pre-ICD10 counterpart: | 2nd to Drug OD/ETOH Intox/Withdrawal (Toxic Encephalitis) |
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.
Additional Info
Includes:
Common Solvents
- benzene
- butane
- cleaning fluids
- degreasers
- gasoline
- hair spray
- nail polish remover (acetone)
- paint/glue thinners/removers (toluene, turpentine, methyl acetate, ethyl acetate)
- petroleum products
- rubber cement
- spray paint
Withdrawal codes
- This category indicates that the patient has current withdrawal symptoms or syndrome for the indicated substance.
- While withdrawal USUALLY goes along with chronic abuse/dependence/addiction, there are drugs where one may get withdrawal symptoms after a first use (e.g. methamphetamines)
- Thus, if (as will often but not universally be the case) a person in withdrawal does have a chronic abuse/dependence/addiction for that substance, you SHOULD also code that.
withdrawal codes: |
See ICD10 Guideline for drugs and substances for more info on coding substance related ICD10 diagnoses.
Alternate ICD10s to consider coding instead or in addition
solvent related codes: |
withdrawal codes: |
Candidate Combined ICD10 codes
Related CCI Codes
Data Integrity Checks (automatic list)
none found
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