Pulmonary-Renal Syndrome in ICD10
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Background
- This refers to a syndrome of lung and kidney involvement. It is NOT a disease, it is a syndrome that has numerous causes and multiple possible manifestations both in the lungs and the kidneys.
- Most commonly, BUT NOT ALWAYS, it is due to one of another autoimmune disease
- The two most common causes are:
- However, other autoimmune diseases that can cause it include:
- Systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE, lupus)
- Scleroderma or CREST syndrome (systemic sclerosis)
- Collagen-vascular overlap syndrome -- including Mixed Connective Tissue Disease (MCTD)
- Collagen-vascular disease, NOS
- Vasculopathy/vasculitis, NOS
- Dermatomyositis/polymyositis
- Microscopic polyangiitis/polyarteritis
- Churg-Strauss syndrome (eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA), allergic granulomatous angiitis)
- and other auto-immune disorders
- There are also non-autoimmune causes, most of which are immune-mediated reactions to infections.
- The lung manifestations are various and may include: hypoxemia, pulmonary hemorrhage, infiltrates
- The renal manifestations are various and may include: renal failure (acute or subacute or even chronic), hematuria
- As this diagnosis is a syndrome and not a disease, and it involves two organ systems, you should ALSO code the manifesting symptoms as Combined ICD10 codes; for example this might be Hemorrhage, respiratory sites, NOS AND Nephritic syndrome, rapidly progressive
- if the cause (likely one of the conditions listed above) is known, list its code as the same Combined ICD10 codes as the symptoms
- if the cause is not known by the end of the ward stay, then as usual, code the manifestations, which may be signs or symptoms
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