ICD-10 Coding for Left Ventricular Diastolic Dysfunction(I11.0H, I11.0U, I50.3)
Learn about ICD-10 coding for left ventricular diastolic dysfunction, including documentation requirements and common coding pitfalls.
Complete code families applicable to Left Ventricular Diastolic Dysfunction
Compare key differences between these codes to ensure accurate selection
| Code | Description | When to Use | Key Documentation |
|---|---|---|---|
| I50.31 | Acute diastolic heart failure | Use when acute symptoms of heart failure are present with preserved ejection fraction. |
|
| I50.32 | Chronic diastolic heart failure | Use for chronic heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. |
|
| I51.89 | Other ill-defined heart diseases | Use for diastolic dysfunction without heart failure symptoms. |
|
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 aboutLeft Ventricular Diastolic Dysfunction
Alternative codes to consider when ruling out similar conditions
Documentation & Coding Risks
Avoid these common issues when documenting Left Ventricular Diastolic Dysfunction.
Failure to document heart failure symptoms
Impact
Clinical: Inaccurate diagnosis of heart failure type., Regulatory: Non-compliance with coding standards., Financial: Potential loss of reimbursement.
Mitigation
Ensure all heart failure symptoms are documented., Use standardized templates for heart failure documentation.
Using unspecified heart failure codes
Impact
Reimbursement: May result in lower reimbursement rates., Compliance: Non-compliance with coding guidelines., Data Quality: Inaccurate clinical data representation.
Mitigation
Ensure ejection fraction and heart failure type are documented.
Unspecified heart failure coding
Impact
Using unspecified codes when specific ejection fraction data is available.
Mitigation
Implement EHR alerts for missing ejection fraction documentation.