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ICD-10 Coding for Oral Bleeding(K13.79, T81.0)

Complete ICD-10-CM coding and documentation guide for Oral Bleeding. Includes clinical validation requirements, documentation requirements, and coding pitfalls.

Also known as:

Mouth BleedingGingival Hemorrhage

Related ICD-10 Code Ranges

Complete code families applicable to Oral Bleeding

K13.7Primary Range

Other diseases of lip and oral mucosa

This range includes codes for various conditions affecting the oral cavity, including bleeding.

Complications of procedures, not elsewhere classified

This range is used for postprocedural complications, such as bleeding following a dental procedure.

Other specified coagulation defects

This range is relevant for bleeding due to coagulation disorders.

Code Comparison: When to Use Each Code

Compare key differences between these codes to ensure accurate selection

CodeDescriptionWhen to UseKey Documentation
K13.79Other oral hemorrhageUse for spontaneous oral bleeding without a known cause.
  • Unexplained gingival or mucosal bleeding without trauma or procedure history
T81.0Postprocedural hemorrhage and hematoma of a circulatory system organ or structure following a procedureUse for bleeding that occurs as a complication of a dental procedure.
  • Documentation of recent dental procedure with subsequent bleeding

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: ICD-10 code for oral bleeding

Essential facts and insights about Oral Bleeding

The ICD-10 code for oral bleeding is K13.79, used for spontaneous oral hemorrhage without a known cause.

Primary ICD-10-CM Codes for oral bleeding

Other oral hemorrhage
Billable Code

Decision Criteria

clinical Criteria

  • Presence of spontaneous bleeding in the oral cavity without recent procedures.

Applicable To

  • Spontaneous oral bleeding

Excludes

  • Postprocedural hemorrhage (T81.0)

Clinical Validation Requirements

  • Unexplained gingival or mucosal bleeding without trauma or procedure history

Code-Specific Risks

  • Risk of unspecified coding if documentation lacks detail on bleeding site and severity.

Coding Notes

  • Ensure documentation specifies the location and severity of bleeding.

Ancillary Codes

Additional codes that should be used in conjunction with the main diagnosis codes when applicable.

Other specified coagulation defects

D68.8
Use when bleeding is associated with a confirmed coagulation disorder.

Long term (current) use of anticoagulants

Z79.01
Use when bleeding is related to anticoagulant therapy.

Differential Codes

Alternative codes to consider when ruling out similar conditions to the primary diagnosis.

Hemorrhage, not elsewhere classified

R58.9
Use R58.9 for general hemorrhage not specific to the oral cavity.

Other oral hemorrhage

K13.79
Use K13.79 for non-procedural oral bleeding.

Documentation & Coding Risks

Avoid these common documentation and coding issues when documenting Oral Bleeding to ensure proper reimbursement, maintain compliance, and reduce audit risk. These guidelines are particularly important when using ICD-10 code K13.79.

Impact

Clinical: Misrepresentation of clinical scenario., Regulatory: Potential audit trigger., Financial: Denial of claims due to unspecified coding.

Mitigation Strategy

Document procedure details, Link bleeding to specific procedure

Impact

Reimbursement: May lead to lower reimbursement due to unspecified coding., Compliance: Increases risk of audit due to lack of specificity., Data Quality: Reduces data accuracy for clinical research.

Mitigation Strategy

Use K13.79 for oral-specific bleeding.

Impact

Using unspecified codes increases audit risk.

Mitigation Strategy

Ensure detailed documentation of bleeding site and cause.

Documentation errors, coding pitfalls, and audit risks are interconnected aspects of medical coding and billing. Addressing all three areas helps ensure accurate coding, optimal reimbursement, and regulatory compliance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about ICD-10 coding for Oral Bleeding, with expert answers to help guide accurate code selection and documentation.

Documentation Templates for Oral Bleeding

Use these documentation templates to ensure complete and accurate documentation for Oral Bleeding. These templates include all required elements for proper coding and billing.

Post-extraction bleeding

Specialty: Oral Surgery

Required Elements

  • Bleeding origin and pattern
  • Hemostatic measures attempted
  • Lab correlation

Examples: Poor vs. Good Documentation

Poor Documentation Example
Bleeding gums noted.
Good Documentation Example
Active arterial bleeding from left posterior mandibular gingiva with clot formation failure.
Explanation
The good example specifies the location, pattern, and hemostatic attempts.

Need help with ICD-10 coding for Oral Bleeding? Ask your questions below.

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