Pyelonephritis (Kidney Infection/Abcess)

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Revision as of 14:27, 8 January 2009 by TOstryzniuk (talk | contribs)
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Definition

  • Infection of the KIDNEY


Legacy Content

This page is about the pre-ICD10 diagnosis coding schema. See the ICD10 Diagnosis List, or the following for similar diagnoses in ICD10:Kidney infection, acute (pyelonephritis), Kidney infection, chronic (pyelonephritis), Kidney, renal abscess or perinephric abscess, Iatrogenic, infection, urinary catheter

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Legacy Content

This page is about the pre-ICD10 diagnosis coding schema. See the ICD10 Diagnosis List, or the following for similar diagnoses in ICD10:Kidney infection, acute (pyelonephritis), Kidney infection, chronic (pyelonephritis), Kidney, renal abscess or perinephric abscess, Iatrogenic, infection, urinary catheter

Click Expand to show legacy content.



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Discussion

  • I have a dumb question in our old books code 359 kidney infections/abcesses (ei.pyelonephritis/urosepsis) and code 360 was just for cystitis (bladder infection) in our new book code 51 says only Cystitis (bladder infection) does not say Urosepsis
  • definition: Can be used interchangeably to describe either
  • (A)urinary tract infection(UTI) or
  • (B) the rare occurrence of bacterial seeding into the blood stream due to an UTI causing a generalised infection.
  • So my question is we now include urosepsis to code 51? Is this a correct understanding of the use of code 51? (SKiesman, Jan 8 2009 10:54am)
  • Question is never dumb.
  • First thing, please get rid of you old code book, you should have an updated one. These code were migrated to the infection section June 26.06. I am not sure why you are still using old code book?
  • Urosepsis is a term used imprecisely to denote infection ranging from urinary tract infection to generalized sepsis which may result from such infection.
  • for our purpose the definition of urosepsis is: bacteremia/Septecemia resulting from urinary tract infection.
  • If localized bladder infection (cystitis) only code 51 - subcode with applicable pathogen
  • if the DX is urosepsis - which mean it is know or suspected that the infection has gone into bloodstream, then also code with septicimia/bacteremia (46) with subcode that is applicable. TOstryzniuk 14:11, 8 January 2009 (CST)
  • Yes it seems that Doc's use the DX of urosepsis when referring the localized bladder infection.