ICD-10 Coding for Alcoholic Ketoacidosis(E11.1, E86.0D, E86.0U)

Learn about the ICD-10 coding for alcoholic ketoacidosis, including documentation requirements, coding pitfalls, and differentiation from diabetic ketoacidosis.

Also known as:
AKAAlcohol-Induced Ketoacidosis
Related ICD-10 Code Ranges

Complete code families applicable to Alcoholic Ketoacidosis

Key Information

Essential facts and insights aboutAlcoholic Ketoacidosis

Differential Codes

Alternative codes to consider when ruling out similar conditions

Type 2 diabetes mellitus with ketoacidosisE11.1

Use when ketoacidosis is due to diabetes, indicated by hyperglycemia.

Documentation & Coding Risks

Avoid these common issues when documenting Alcoholic Ketoacidosis.

Failing to document the absence of hyperglycemia.

Impact

Clinical: May lead to incorrect treatment if misclassified as diabetic ketoacidosis., Regulatory: Increases risk of audit and compliance issues., Financial: Potential for incorrect billing and reimbursement.

Mitigation

Ensure thorough documentation of lab results., Clarify the cause of ketoacidosis in the patient's history.

Confusing alcoholic ketoacidosis with diabetic ketoacidosis.

Impact

Reimbursement: Incorrect coding may lead to improper DRG assignment and reimbursement issues., Compliance: Misclassification can result in compliance audits., Data Quality: Inaccurate data entry affects clinical records and research data.

Mitigation

Ensure documentation specifies the absence of hyperglycemia and links ketoacidosis to alcohol use.

Misclassification of ketoacidosis type

Impact

Risk of coding alcoholic ketoacidosis as diabetic ketoacidosis due to similar clinical presentations.

Mitigation

Thorough documentation of alcohol use and lab results confirming non-diabetic etiology.

Frequently Asked Questions