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Procedure
Practice 04/15/00 - Coding
Recommendations
Seizure
Disorders
Brain
Dysfunction
- Etiologies
- Epilepsy
Syndromes
- Types
- Treatment
- ICD-9-CM
Coding Tips
More than 2 million people in
the United States have experienced an unprovoked seizure or
have been diagnosed with epilepsy or other seizure disorder.
An isolated seizure usually has an underlying cause that needs
to be investigated. Only recurrent seizure activity is classified
as a seizure disorder. Idiopathic seizure disorders with no
identifiable cause are classified as epilepsy. Because of
their various etiologies, coding seizure disorders can be
confusing. While some seizures are classified as epilepsy
and coded as such, others are not. This month we review seizure
disorders and their etiologies and treatments and offer some
coding tips and guidelines.
A seizure is the transmission
of abnormal signals by clusters of neurons. Neurons normally
generate electrochemical impulses that act on other neurons,
glands, and muscles to produce thoughts, feelings, and actions.
In a seizure, the normal pattern of neuronal activity becomes
disturbed, causing strange sensations, emotions, and behavior,
or sometimes convulsions, muscle spasms, and loss of consciousness.
Neurons may fire as many as 500 times a second, much faster
than the normal rate of about 80 times a second. In some people,
this happens only occasionally; for others, it may happen
up to hundreds of times a day.
Seizures may develop because
of an abnormality in brain circuitry, an imbalance of nerve
signaling chemicals called neurotransmitters, or a combination
of these factors. Researchers believe that some seizures are
due to an abnormally high level of excitatory neurotransmitters
that increase neuronal activity, or conversely, due to an
abnormally low level of inhibitory neurotransmitters that
decrease neuronal activity in the brain. Either situation
can result in overactive neurons and seizures.
The cell membrane that surrounds
each neuron plays an important role in seizure disorders.
Cell membranes are crucial for neurons to generate electrical
impulses. Recent research has focused on membrane structure,
how molecules move in and out of membranes, and how the cell
nourishes and repairs the membrane. A disruption in any of
these processes may lead to seizures.
Seizures have many causes. Anything
that disturbs the normal pattern of neuron activity, from
illness to brain damage to abnormal brain development, can
lead to seizures. Given sufficient stimulus, any person may
have a seizure. The amount of stimulation required to induce
seizure is called the seizure threshold.
Febrile Seizures
These seizures are brought on
by a high fever in infants or young children.
Most seizures last only 1-2 minutes. During the seizure, the
child loses consciousness, and extremities on both sides of
the body shake. Most children with febrile seizures have fevers
of greater than 102 degrees F., with seizures occurring during
the first 24 hours of illness. About 4% of children have at
least one febrile seizure, and about one-third of these children
will have additional febrile seizures before they outgrow
them. Usually febrile seizures occur in children between the
ages of 6 months and 5 years, and they are particularly common
in toddlers.
Eclampsia
Eclampsia is a life-threatening
condition that can develop during the third trimester
of pregnancy. Its symptoms include sudden elevations
of blood pressure, proteinuria, generalized edema, headache
and visual disturbances, and in severe cases, seizures. Eclampsia
requires emergency treatment in a hospital setting and usually
does not result in additional seizures or epilepsy once pregnancy
is over.
Pseudoseizures
(Psychogenic Seizures)
These seizures, also called
nonepileptic events, mimic seizures in presentation
without EEG evidence of true seizure activity in the brain.
Pseudoseizures indicate an underlying psychiatric
condition.
Other Causes
Essentially, any disorder that
alters brain function or deprives the brain of oxygen may
trigger the onset of a seizure. Once the underlying disorder
is treated successfully seizures often stop. However, the
odds of becoming seizure-free after the primary disorder is
treated vary depending on the type of disorder, the brain
region affected, and whether brain damage occurred prior to
treatment.
- Cerebrovascular disease
reduces the supply of oxygen to the brain and is responsible
for about 32% of newly developed seizure disorders in elderly
people.
- Brain abscess, meningitis,
AIDS, viral encephalitis, chronic infections such
as neurosyphilis, and other infectious diseases
can lead to seizures.
- Tumors and other
space-occupying lesions may cause seizures at any
age. Seizures are often the first symptom of tumor and are
most likely to occur with lesions involving the frontal,
parietal, or temporal lobe regions of the brain.
- Developmental and
metabolic disorders, including cerebral palsy,
neurofibromatosis, pyruvate deficiency, celiac disease,
tuberous sclerosis, Landau-Kleffner syndrome, and autism
are often associated with seizure disorder. Other metabolic
disorders such as diabetes mellitus, acute renal
failure, and phenylketonuria may also be responsible
for seizures. These conditions, once diagnosed, are among
the most treatable causes of seizures.
- Trauma is
an important cause of seizures at any age. In some cases,
the brains attempts to repair itself after a head
injury may inadvertently generate abnormal nerve connections
that induce seizure activity. A severe head injury may result
in traumatic hydrocephalus, a condition of excess fluid
accumulation in the brain, which also may lead to seizures.
- Congenital abnormalities
and perinatal injury due to maternal infections,
poor nutrition, maternal substance abuse, or fetal oxygen
deficiencies may result in seizures presenting in infancy
or early childhood.
- Poisoning
from lead exposure, carbon monoxide, and other environmental
contaminants can result in seizures. Exposure to street
drugs, alcohol withdrawal, and overdoses of antidepressants
and other medications can also cause seizures.
- Environmental or
lifestyle factors such as sleep deprivation, alcohol
consumption, stress, or the hormonal changes of pregnancy
may trigger seizures. Smoking cigarettes
also can trigger seizures. The nicotine in cigarettes acts
on receptors for the excitatory neurotransmitter acetylcholine
in the brain, which increases neuronal firing.
Hundreds of different epilepsy
syndromes have been identified. Some of these syndromes appear
to be hereditary. For other syndromes the cause is unknown.
Epilepsy syndromes are frequently described by their
symptoms or by where they originate in the
brain.
Absence Epilepsy
(Petit Mal Seizures)
This epilepsy syndrome is characterized
by repeated partial seizures called absence
seizures that cause momentary lapses of consciousness. Seizures
almost always begin in childhood or adolescence, and they
tend to run in families. Some people with absence seizures
have purposeless movements during their seizures, such as
a jerking arm or rapidly blinking eyes. If the attack occurs
during conversation, the individual may miss a few words or
stop speaking for a few seconds. Loss of muscle tone may cause
a person to fall ("drop attacks"). The impairment
of consciousness is so brief that the individual is unaware
of it. Full recovery occurs immediately after the seizure
with no post-seizure confusion. However, these seizures sometimes
occur so frequently that they impede concentration in school
or other situations.
Photosensitive
Epilepsy
In this syndrome, seizures are
triggered by flashing lights or flickering
computer or television screens. It also may be called
photic epilepsy or photogenic epilepsy.
Psychomotor
Epilepsy
This term refers to recurrent
partial seizures. "Psychomotor" refers
to the strange sensations, emotions, and behavior seen with
these seizures.
Temporal Lobe
Epilepsy (TLE)
TLE is the most common
epilepsy syndrome with partial seizures. These seizures
are often associated with auras and usually begin in childhood.
Repeated temporal lobe seizures can cause a brain structure
called the hippocampus to shrink over time. The hippocampus
is important for memory and learning. While it may take years
of temporal lobe seizures for measurable hippocampal damage
to occur, this finding underscores the need to treat TLE early
and as effectively as possible.
Frontal Lobe
Epilepsy
This syndrome usually involves
a cluster of short seizures with a sudden
onset and termination. Symptoms of the varied subtypes of
frontal lobe epilepsy depend on where in the frontal lobe
the seizures occur.
Occipital Lobe
Epilepsy
These seizures usually begin
with visual hallucinations, rapid eye blinking, or
other eye-related symptoms. Otherwise, they resemble
temporal or frontal lobe epilepsy.
Parietal Lobe
Epilepsy
The symptoms of parietal lobe
epilepsy closely resemble those of other types of
epilepsy. This situation may reflect the fact that
parietal lobe seizures tend to spread and involve other areas
of the brain.
Infantile Spasms
Several types of epilepsy begin
in infancy. The most common type of infantile epilepsy is
infantile spasms, clusters of seizures that
usually begin before the age of 6 months.
Status Epilepticus
Status epilepticus is a life-threatening
condition in which a person either has prolonged seizures
or does not fully regain consciousness between seizures.
The amount of time in a prolonged seizure that must pass before
a person is diagnosed with status epilepticus is a subject
of debate. Many doctors diagnose status epilepticus if a person
has been in a prolonged seizure for 5 minutes. However, other
doctors use more conservative definitions of this condition
and may not diagnose status epilepticus unless the person
has had a prolonged seizure of 10 minutes or even 30 minutes.
Other Epilepsy
Syndromes
Many other types of epilepsy
exist, each with its own characteristic set of symptoms. Many
of these conditions, including Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and
Rasmussens encephalitis, begin in childhood. Children
with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome have severe
epilepsy with several different types of seizures. This severe
form of epilepsy can be very difficult to treat effectively.
Rasmussens encephalitis is a progressive
type of epilepsy in which half of the brain shows continual
inflammation. Some childhood epilepsy syndromes, such as childhood
absence epilepsy, tend to go into remission or stop entirely
during adolescence, whereas other syndromes are usually present
for life once they develop. Seizure syndromes do not always
appear in childhood. For example, Ramsay Hunt syndrome
type II is a rare and severe progressive type of
epilepsy that generally begins in early adulthood and leads
to reduced muscle coordination and cognitive abilities in
addition to seizures.
Epilepsy syndromes that do not
seem to impair cognitive functions or development are often
described as benign. Benign epilepsy syndromes
include benign infantile encephalopathy and
benign neonatal convulsions. Other syndromes,
such as progressive myoclonic encephalopathy,
include neurological and developmental problems. However,
these problems may be caused by underlying degenerative processes
rather than by the seizures. Epilepsy syndromes in which the
seizures and/or the persons cognitive or motor abilities
get worse over time are called progressive epilepsy.
Doctors have described more
than 30 different types of seizures. Seizures are divided
into two major categories, partial and generalized, with many
different types of seizures in each of these categories. As
coders, we need to remember that, although the type of seizure
activity is often an important clinical detail for treatment,
it does not clarify the presence or absence of epilepsy as
a diagnosis.
Partial Seizures
Partial seizures occur in just
one part of the brain. These seizures are frequently described
by the area of the brain in which they originate. For example,
someone might be diagnosed with partial frontal lobe seizures.
In a simple partial
seizure, also known as a jacksonian seizure,
the person remains conscious but may experience unusual feelings
or sensations, such as sudden inexplicable feelings of joy,
anger, or sadness. He or she also may hear, smell, taste,
see, or feel things that are not real.
In a complex partial
seizure, the person has a change in or loss of consciousness.
People having a complex partial seizure may display strange,
repetitious behaviors such as blinks, twitches, mouth movements,
or walking in a circle. These repetitious movements are called
automatisms. They also may fling objects across the room or
strike out at walls or furniture as though they are angry
or afraid. These seizures usually last just a few seconds.
Some people with partial seizures,
especially complex partial seizures, may experience auras,
unusual sensations that warn of an impending seizure. Auras
are actually simple partial seizures in which
the person maintains consciousness. The symptoms an individual
person has and the progression of those symptoms tends to
be stereotyped or similar every time.
Generalized
Seizures
Generalized seizures are a result
of abnormal neuronal activity in many parts of the brain.
These seizures may cause loss of consciousness, falls, or
massive muscle spasms.
Many types of seizures fall
into this category. Tonic seizures cause
stiffening of muscles, most often in the back, legs, and arms.
Clonic seizures cause repeated jerking movements
of muscles on both sides of the body. Myoclonic seizures
cause jerks or twitches of the upper body, arms, or legs.
Atonic seizures (drop attacks) cause a loss
of normal muscle tone. The affected person will fall down
or may nod his or her head involuntarily. Tonic-clonic
seizures (grand mal seizures) cause a mixture of
symptoms, including stiffening of the body and repeated jerks
of the arms and/or legs as well as loss of consciousness.
Medications
By far the most common approach
to treating seizures is the prescription of anticonvulsive
drugs. More than 20 such drugs are available, all with different
benefits and side effects. The choice of which drug to prescribe
at what dosage depends upon many different factors, including
the type of seizures a person has, the persons lifestyle
and age, how frequently the seizures occur, and, for a woman,
the likelihood that she will become pregnant. Commonly prescribed
anticonvulsants include carbamazapine, valproate, phenytoin
(Dilantin), clonazepam, phenobarbital, primidone, tiagabine,
lamotrigine, gabapentin, ethosuxamide, felbamate, topiramate,
Tegretol, and carbazapine.
Surgery
Doctors generally recommend
surgery only after patients have tried two or three different
medications without success or if an identifiable brain lesion
-a damaged or abnormally functioning area- is believed to
cause the seizures. In cases where seizures are caused by
a brain tumor, hydrocephalus, or other condition that can
be treated surgically, doctors may operate to treat these
underlying conditions. In many cases, once the underlying
condition is successfully treated, seizures will stop as well.
- Stereotactic radiosurgery
employs the precise delivery of a single high dose of radiation
to destroy a discrete seizure focus within the brain. Three
different technologies may be used to perform this procedure,
the source of radiation being the key differentiating factor.
Methods include single photon source linear accelerators
(LINAC), multi-source photon (cobalt-60) technology, and
high energy particulate (particle beam) technology.
- Lobectomy
is appropriate for partial seizures that originate in just
one area of the brain. In general, people have a better
chance of becoming seizure-free after surgery if they have
a small seizure focus. The most common type of lobectomy
is a temporal lobe resection, which is performed for people
with temporal lobe epilepsy.
- Multiple subpial
transection is performed if seizures originate
in part of the brain that cannot be removed. In this operation,
surgeons make a series of cuts that are designed to prevent
seizures from spreading into other parts of the brain while
leaving the persons normal abilities intact.
- Corpus callosotomy,
or severing the network of neural connections between the
right and left hemispheres of the brain, is done primarily
in children with severe seizures that start in one half
of the brain and spread to the other side. Corpus callosotomy
can end drop attacks and other generalized seizures. However,
the procedure does not stop seizures on the side of the
brain where they originate, and in fact, these partial seizures
may even increase after surgery.
- Hemispherectomy
removes half of the brains cortex, or outer layer,
and is used only for children who have severe damage to
one brain hemisphere and who also have seizures that do
not respond to medication. While this type of surgery is
very radical and is performed only as a last resort, children
often recover very well from the procedure, and their seizures
usually are greatly reduced or may cease altogether. Intense
postsurgical rehabilitation is required in order for the
child to regain normal function and cognitive abilities.
Devices
The vagus nerve stimulator
(VNS) was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) in 1997 for use in people with seizures that are not
well-controlled by medication. The VNS is a battery-powered
device that is surgically implanted under the skin of the
chest, much like a pacemaker, and attached to the vagus nerve
in the lower neck. This device delivers short bursts of electrical
energy to the brain via the vagus nerve. On average, this
stimulation reduces seizures by about 20-40 percent. Patients
usually cannot stop taking epilepsy medication because of
the stimulator, but they often experience fewer seizures and
they may be able to reduce the dose of their medication.
Diet
In some cases children may experience
fewer seizures if they maintain a strict diet rich in fats
and low in carbohydrates. This ketogenic diet
creates ketosis and causes the body to metabolize fats instead
of carbohydrates to survive. Researchers are not sure how
ketosis inhibits seizures. One study showed that a byproduct
of ketosis called beta-hydroxybutyrate (BHB) inhibits seizures
in animals. If BHB also works in humans, researchers may eventually
be able to develop drugs that mimic the seizure-inhibiting
effects of the ketogenic diet.
Now that we know seizures may
be associated with a wide variety of diseases, it is clear
that not all seizures should be coded to the epilepsy subheading
of 345.xx.
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If
chart documentation is unclear, always consult the attending
physician for clarification of the exact nature of the
seizure disorder.
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Do
not code a seizure disorder as epilepsy unless
the physician has specifically documented epilepsy in
the medical record
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Remember
to assign the appropriate 5th digit of 0 or 1 to codes
345.0, 345.1, and 345.4 through 345.9 in the epilepsy
subcategory to denote presence or absence of intractable
epilepsy.
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Intractable
epilepsy refers to epilepsy that is not effectively controlled
by medication. Do not automatically code recurrent epileptic
seizures as intractable, since all seizures in an epileptic
patient are recurrent.
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Status
epilepticus not otherwise specified is assigned 345.3.
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Codes
780.31 and 780.39 are from Chapter 16, Signs, Symptoms
and Ill-Defined Conditions. As with all codes within
this chapter, these codes should be used as principal
diagnoses only if a related definitive diagnosis (i.e.,
underlying etiology) has not been established. If the
underlying cause is known, the cause is coded first. Either
of these codes may then be used as secondary diagnosis. |
- In cases of recurrent seizures
with no mention of epilepsy or other cause, assign 780.39,
Other convulsions.
- Code febrile seizures to
780.31, Febrile convulsions.
- Assign 779.0, Convulsions
in newborn, for seizures in newborn infants.
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Pseudoseizures,
also sometimes known as psychogenic seizures, are coded
300.11, Conversion disorder.
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Progressive
myoclonic epilepsy is coded 333.2, Myoclonus.
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Seizures
associated with pregnancy eclampsia are assigned to either
642.6, Eclampsia, or 642.7, Pre-eclampsia or
eclampsia superimposed on pre-existing hypertension,
with the appropriate 5th digit 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4. 780.39
may be assigned as a secondary diagnosis.
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Seizures
due to scarlet fever are coded 034.1, Scarlet fever.
Use 780.39 as a secondary code if desired.
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Code
seizures due to neurosyphilis 094.1, General paresis.
Again, 780.39 may be used as a secondary diagnosis.
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Seizures
due to malignancy are coded to the malignancy with 780.39
as a secondary diagnosis.
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Seizures
due to trauma are coded to the specific trauma and thus
are assigned a code from the Injury and Poisoning chapter.
Code 780.39 may be used as a secondary code.
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Alcohol
withdrawal with seizures is coded to the appropriate code
from subcategory 291, Alcoholic psychosis with
780.39 as a secondary diagnosis.
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Seizures
due to an overdose or administration of an incorrect substance
are assigned a code from the 960-979 range with 780.39
as a secondary diagnosis code and an E-code to identify
the circumstances involved.
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Seizures
due to an adverse effect of a properly administered medication
are coded 780.39 with the appropriate code from range
E930-E949 to identify the drug. |
Practice
Makes Perfect!
Are you ready for some hands-on
practice? Read the patient reports on our Procedure
Practice page.
Assign the appropriate codes and then compare your answers
with our coding
recommendations.
Good luck!
Back to:
Top
- Brain
Dysfunction
- Etiologies
- Epilepsy
Syndromes
- Types
- Treatment
- ICD-9-CM
Coding Tips
Table
of Contents
If you
have comments or suggestions about our code selections or
about any topic on our Coding Edge® pages, please e-mail us
at codingedge@lagunamedsys.com.
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