TRANSCRIÇÃOEnglish

Medical Coding And Billing Tutorials for Beginners | ICD, CPT, HCPCS, CPC | Medical Coding Demo - 1

48m 5s6,258 palavras952 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIÇÃO COMPLETA

0:00

So welcome to great online training. Uh

0:02

today we're going to discuss about ICD

0:05

10 CM chapter 19. Okay. Which is injury

0:09

and poisoning and code ranges are S0000

0:13

to

0:14

T88. Am I audible right? Yeah. Yes. Yes.

0:17

Okay. So topics covered in this class

0:20

are injuries and wounds, fracture and

0:23

its types. Then ICD10 CM guidelines. Uh

0:27

like first guideline will be application

0:31

of seventh character, coding of

0:33

injuries, coding of traumatic fractures,

0:37

then coding of burns and corrosions,

0:39

adverse effects, poisoning, underdosing

0:43

and toxic effects, adult and child

0:46

abuse, neglect and other mal treatment

0:49

and complication of and lastly we'll see

0:52

question and answer. But as this chapter

0:55

has so many guidelines, we have to

0:57

divide this chapter in two sessions. Two

1:00

or maybe three

1:02

sessions. Uh I can't say right now.

1:05

Okay, we'll see. Uh I try to cover in

1:09

today's session till this D guideline

1:12

burn and corrosion or else we at least

1:16

cover this traumatic fracture. Okay.

1:19

Sure. Uh yeah Nikita that today actually

1:22

it is 9:45 now for me it's 9:45 p.m.

1:26

Yeah. So so today we'll complete till

1:31

this C point coding of traumatic

1:33

fracture and tomorrow we'll start again

1:36

with coding of burns and other topics.

1:39

Okay. So introduction this chapter

1:42

includes the diagnosis course for

1:45

injuries, fractures, burn, burns,

1:48

adverse effects, poisonings, toxic

1:51

effects and complications of cures.

1:55

Okay. So uh the S section you can see

2:00

the code range start with S and end with

2:04

T right T codes. So s section provides

2:08

scores for various types of injuries

2:11

related to single body regions. Various

2:14

types of injuries or fractures you can

2:17

say wound

2:18

contusion and all we can find in S

2:22

section means the those course starts

2:25

with S letter and code started with T T

2:30

later means T section covers injuries to

2:34

unspecified body regions as well as

2:36

poisoning and certain other consequences

2:39

of external causes poisoning overdosing

2:43

and everything you will uh get quotes in

2:47

T- session. Okay. For current injury or

2:51

full or any contusion or fracture,

2:56

dislocation, this kind of core, sprain,

2:59

strain you can find in a section. So

3:02

first we'll see what is injury and what

3:04

are wounds. Injury is

3:08

an damage. An injury is damage to your

3:12

body. It is a general term that refers

3:15

to harm caused by accidents, falls,

3:19

hits, weapons, and more other things.

3:23

Okay. These injuries range from minor to

3:27

life-threatening. Injuries can happen at

3:29

work or play, indoor or outdoor, driving

3:33

or driving a car or walking across the

3:36

street. Okay. And that's why we need

3:40

external cause code. In previous session

3:43

we already learn about external causes

3:46

right external cause place of occurrence

3:49

and status. So we have to use those

3:52

codes with this injury. Injury codes

3:56

injury includes uh anything injury

3:59

subluxation dislocation fracture or

4:02

wound contusion hematoma anything. Okay,

4:07

we have to primary code this injury

4:09

means uh any code from category S and

4:13

after that we have to use those uh those

4:16

codes which we have already learned in

4:20

previous session external cause. Okay.

4:24

Wounds wounds are injuries that break

4:27

the skin uh break the skin or other body

4:30

tissues. They include cuts, scrapes,

4:34

scratches, and puncture skin. They often

4:38

happen because of an accident, but

4:40

surgery, sutures, and stitches also

4:43

cause wounds. Next, bruises and

4:46

hematoma. Bruises is also known as

4:49

contusion or

4:51

echimosis. Okay, bruises, contusion,

4:54

echimosis, all the three terms are same.

4:57

Okay. It is red, blue, black or purplish

5:01

color mark on the skin. It develops due

5:04

to a small leakage of blood from the

5:08

capillaries. And hematoma. Hematoma is a

5:12

collection or pull of blood outside a

5:15

blood vessel. It occurs due to a large

5:18

leakage of blood. It is typically a

5:21

raised solid mass that feels firm or

5:25

spongy. You can see here difference

5:27

between cartusion and hematoma.

5:29

Cartusion usually not significantly

5:32

damaged blood collection is absent or

5:35

minimum and discoloration and in case of

5:39

hematoma damage blood vessels are there

5:42

and blood collects in tissue causing

5:45

swelling and swelling may be discolored

5:48

and painful. So this is difference

5:51

between culin and hematoma. In this case

5:53

of a beta swelling is there and

5:56

contigusion just

5:57

shows dark blue black purplish color

6:01

mark. Next point strain and springs.

6:05

Strength injury of a muscle or a tissue

6:09

connecting muscle to bone. Okay means

6:13

tendle. Stretch often occur in lower

6:16

back and in the muscles in the back of

6:19

the thigh. And sprain is a stretching or

6:22

tearing of ligaments the uh the fibrous

6:26

tissue that connects bones to joints.

6:29

Okay. Means injury to the ligament is

6:32

called sprain whereas injury to the uh

6:35

tendon is called strength. You can get

6:39

straightforward question of one mark in

6:42

such type of definitions. Okay. or

6:45

simple meaning what is strain and they

6:48

will give you example or what is

6:50

ligament what is tendon like this

6:52

straightforward questions are also there

6:55

uh in anatomy section of CPC examination

6:59

I'll share with you uh CPC pattern and

7:02

everything later on okay so this is

7:06

strain muscle and tendon okay you can

7:09

see and this is pain injury to the

7:12

strain is injury to the tendon. If you

7:15

get confused, you can remember like

7:19

this in the spelling of strain T is

7:22

there and in the tendon T is also there.

7:25

Okay, so TT strain for tendon, sprain

7:28

for ligament. Next point, dislocation

7:31

and subloation. A sublux uh subluxation

7:34

occurs when two adjoining bones get

7:38

pulled partially out of position. Okay.

7:42

But still in touch. A dislocation occurs

7:46

when they no longer in touch. A

7:48

subluxation is when two adjoining bones

7:50

get pulled partially out of position but

7:54

still they are in touch. But dislocation

7:56

occurs when they are no longer in. In

7:59

shoulder for example a subluxation would

8:01

occur when the arm was partially out of

8:05

its socket.

8:07

and dislocation when it was fully out of

8:11

its socket. These are examples of

8:14

dislocations. Enloated, anterior,

8:17

posterior dislocation and inferior

8:20

dislocation. Now what is fracture? A

8:22

break in a bone is called fracture.

8:25

Fracture can happen because of fall, car

8:27

accident or sports injury. That's why

8:29

when whenever fracture is there in your

8:32

documentation or in your in your

8:34

question you have to cause of fracture

8:37

is there you have to use external cause

8:39

code also. Okay. You can experience

8:43

intense pain, swelling, numbness,

8:45

tingling and deformity at the site of

8:48

the fracture. Fracture are classified as

8:52

either open or closed. So this is simple

8:55

fracture and this is compound fracture

8:57

or you can say this is closed fracture

8:59

okay where skin is intact and this is

9:02

compound or open fracture bone comes out

9:05

of the skin. So open fracture also known

9:07

as compound fracture. Okay. The bone

9:11

pokes through the skin and can be seen

9:14

or a deep wound exposed the the bone

9:18

through the skin. And close fracture

9:22

also known as simple fracture. The bone

9:24

is broken but the skin is intact. This

9:28

is example of close fracture and this is

9:32

compound or open fracture. And we have

9:36

separate codes for open fracture,

9:37

separate code for closed fracture. We'll

9:41

see how to code use those codes. Now you

9:44

see types of fractures. Okay. Transverse

9:46

fracture breaks the shaft of a bone

9:50

across the long lo longitudinal axis.

9:53

Obly fracture occurs at an angle that is

9:58

not 90°.

10:00

Spiral fracture spread along length of

10:03

bone and produced by twisting stress and

10:09

communal fracture. Several breaks result

10:12

in many small pieces between two large

10:15

segments. You can say this example. This

10:18

is normal bone. This is example of

10:20

transverse fracture. This is oblique

10:23

fracture. Not an angle of 90°. Okay.

10:26

This is across the longitudinal axis.

10:30

Spiral fracture produced by twisting

DESBLOQUEAR MAIS

Registe-se gratuitamente para aceder a funcionalidades premium

VISUALIZADOR INTERATIVO

Assista ao vídeo com legendas sincronizadas, sobreposição ajustável e controlo total da reprodução.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

RESUMO DE IA

Obtenha um resumo instantâneo gerado por IA do conteúdo do vídeo, pontos-chave e conclusões.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

TRADUZIR

Traduza a transcrição para mais de 100 idiomas com um clique. Baixe em qualquer formato.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

MAPA MENTAL

Visualize a transcrição como um mapa mental interativo. Entenda a estrutura rapidamente.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

CONVERSAR COM A TRANSCRIÇÃO

Faça perguntas sobre o conteúdo do vídeo. Obtenha respostas com tecnologia de IA diretamente da transcrição.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

APROVEITE MAIS DE SUAS TRANSCRIÇÕES

Inscreva-se gratuitamente e desbloqueie o visualizador interativo, resumos de IA, traduções, mapas mentais e muito mais. Não é necessário cartão de crédito.

    Medical Coding An… - Transcrição Completa | YouTubeTranscript.dev