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Idaho Subscriber Answer: For patent foramen ovale (PFO) and atrial septal defect (ASD) closure, you should assign 93580 (Percutaneous transcatheter closure of congenital interatrial communication i.e., Fontan ...
ICD-10 code Q21. 12 for Patent foramen ovale is a medical classification as listed by WHO under the range - Congenital malformations, deformations and chromosomal abnormalities .
For those patients who need or want to avoid PFO, the panel judged anticoagulation the best alternative, although the evidence regarding stroke reduction was of low certainty. The risk of major bleeding probably increased with anticoagulation.
PFO/ASO Closure with ICE (93580 with 93662): Bill ICE-guided PFO closure with CPT 93580 (CardioSEALs, AMPLATZER™ Occluder, etc.). Bill 93580 has ICE/TEE codes if echocardiography was performed during PFO closure.
†Patent foramen ovale (PFO) patients are assigned the same International Classification of Disease (ICD) codes (ICD-9: 745.5, ICD- 10: Q21. 1) as ostium secundum type atrial septal defects (ASD).
PFO means that you have a small opening between the right and left atria of the heart. This opening normally closes soon after birth. But in many people, it does not. PFO itself usually does not cause any symptoms. PFO can occasionally result in complications.
Even in well-pressurized planes, oxygen levels correspond to altitude levels of up to 8,000 feet. At these levels, right- to-left shunting through the PFO distinctly increases because of an in- crease in pulmonary artery pressure. 4,5 Obviously increased shunting across the PFO may facilitate paradoxical embolism.
However, although clinically very different, atrial septal defects (ASD) and patent foramen ovale (PFO) share a single diagnostic code (ICD-9: 745.5, ICD-10: Q21. 1).
PFO closure may be offered to younger patients (e.g., <30 years) with a single, small, deep stroke (<1.5 cm), a large shunt, and absence of any vascular risk factors that would lead to intrinsic small-vessel disease such as hypertension, diabetes, or hyperlipidemia (level C).
PFO was found in 25 to 30 percent of individuals in an autopsy study and in a community-based transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) study 4,5.