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pre-existing hypertension with pre-eclampsia (O11) Clinical Information. A complication of pregnancy, characterized by a complex of symptoms including maternal hypertension and proteinuria with or without pathological edema. Symptoms may range between mild and severe.
A complication of pregnancy, characterized by a complex of symptoms including maternal hypertension and proteinuria with or without pathological edema. Symptoms may range between mild and severe. Pre-eclampsia usually occurs after the 20th week of gestation, but may develop before this time in the presence of trophoblastic disease.
Clinical Information. HELLP Syndrome - A syndrome of HEMOLYSIS, elevated liver ENZYMES, and low blood platelets count (THROMBOCYTOPENIA). HELLP syndrome is observed in pregnant women with PRE-ECLAMPSIA or ECLAMPSIA who also exhibit LIVER damage and abnormalities in BLOOD COAGULATION.
ICD-10 code O14 for Pre-eclampsia is a medical classification as listed by WHO under the range - Pregnancy, childbirth and the puerperium .
Code O14. Copy. ICD-10-CM Code O14. Pre-eclampsia. NON-BILLABLE | ICD-10 from 2011 - 2016. ICD Code O14 is a non-billable code. To code a diagnosis of this type, you must use one of the four child codes of O14 that describes the diagnosis 'pre-eclampsia' in more detail. O14 Pre-eclampsia. O14.0 Mild to moderate pre-eclampsia.
O14.03 is a billable diagnosis code used to specify a medical diagnosis of mild to moderate pre-eclampsia, third trimester. The code is valid during the current fiscal year for the submission of HIPAA-covered transactions from October 01, 2024 through September 30, 2025.
O00-O9A. Pregnancy, childbirth and the puerperium. O14 Pre-eclampsia. Clinical Information. A complication of pregnancy, characterized by a complex of symptoms including maternal hypertension and proteinuria with or without pathological edema. Symptoms may range between mild and severe.
Preeclampsia, with or without severe features, is a disorder of pregnancy associated with new-onset hypertension, usually with accompanying proteinuria, which occurs most often after 20 weeks of gestation and frequently near term.
Some women with gestational hypertension do go on to develop preeclampsia, a more serious type of high blood pressure in pregnancy. Chronic hypertension is high blood pressure that starts before the 20th week of pregnancy or before you became pregnant.
Preeclampsia is a multisystem progressive disorder characterized by the new onset of hypertension and proteinuria or the new onset of hypertension plus significant end-organ dysfunction with or without proteinuria, typically presenting after 20 weeks of gestation or postpartum (table 1).