ICD-10 Coding for Candidal Vulvovaginitis(B37.3, B37.31, B37.31A)

Explore the ICD-10 coding and documentation requirements for candidal vulvovaginitis, including acute and chronic cases.

Also known as:
Yeast InfectionVulvovaginal Candidiasis
Related ICD-10 Code Ranges

Complete code families applicable to Candidal Vulvovaginitis

Code Comparison: When to Use Each Code

Compare key differences between these codes to ensure accurate selection

CodeDescription
B37.31Acute candidiasis of vulva and vagina
B37.32Chronic candidiasis of vulva and vagina

Clinical Decision Support

Always review the patient's clinical documentation thoroughly. When in doubt, choose the more specific code and ensure documentation supports it.

Key Information

Essential facts and insights aboutCandidal Vulvovaginitis

Differential Codes

Alternative codes to consider when ruling out similar conditions

Acute vaginitisN76.0

Use when Candida is not confirmed.

Documentation & Coding Risks

Avoid these common issues when documenting Candidal Vulvovaginitis.

Documenting 'yeast infection' without specifying acute or chronic

Impact

Clinical: Inaccurate treatment planning, Regulatory: Non-compliance with coding standards, Financial: Potential claim denials

Mitigation

Always specify acute or chronic, Include detailed episode history

Using N76.0 instead of B37.3x when Candida is identified

Impact

Reimbursement: Incorrect code may lead to claim denial., Compliance: Non-compliance with coding guidelines., Data Quality: Inaccurate clinical data representation.

Mitigation

Prioritize organism-specific codes over inflammatory codes.

Chronic candidiasis coding

Impact

Lack of documentation for recurrence history.

Mitigation

Ensure detailed history of episodes is documented.

Frequently Asked Questions