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2008 ICD-9-CM Volume 1 Diagnosis Codes Home > Diseases Of The Digestive System 520-579 > Other Diseases Of Digestive System 570-579 >

ICD-9-CM Diagnosis 573

Other disorders of liver

  • 573 is a non-specific code that cannot be used to specify a diagnosis


ICD-9-CM Diagnosis 573.0

Chronic passive congestion of liver

  • 573.0 is a specific code that can be used to specify a diagnosis
  • 573.0 contains 2 index entries

ICD-9-CM Diagnosis 573.1

Hepatitis in viral diseases classified elsewhere

  • 573.1 is a specific code that can be used to specify a diagnosis
  • 573.1 contains 7 index entries

ICD-9-CM Diagnosis 573.2

Hepatitis in other infectious diseases classified elsewhere

  • 573.2 is a specific code that can be used to specify a diagnosis
  • 573.2 contains 6 index entries

ICD-9-CM Diagnosis 573.3

Hepatitis unspecified

  • (hep-a-TYE-tis) Disease of the liver causing inflammation. Symptoms include an enlarged liver, fever, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and dark urine.
  • hepatitis. Inflammation of the liver; usually from a viral infection, but sometimes from toxic agents. Previously endemic throughout much of the developing world, viral hepatitis now ranks as a major public health problem in industrialized nations. The three most common types of viral hepatitis -- A, B, and C -- afflict over 500,000 people in the U.S. each year, and millions worldwide. Hepatitis B alone ranks as the ninth leading killer in the world. Hepatitis A, an RNA enterovirus, spread by contact with fecal matter or blood, most often through ingestion of contaminated food. Rarely fatal, it cannot be treated except by bed rest for 1 -- 4 weeks, during which time no alcohol should be consumed. It may recur after 3 months. Hepatitis B is shed through blood, semen, vaginal secretions, and saliva approximately 4 -- 6 weeks after symptoms develop; the virus may take up to 6 months to incubate, and people may also become asymptomatic carriers. Hepatitis B may heal slowly, and is a leading cause of chronic liver disease and cirrhosis. Effective vaccines exist, but it is the fastest spreading form of the disease in the U.S., with some 300,000 cases reported annually. Rates were up 80% from 1981 -- 1986 among IV drug users and up 38% during the same period among heterosexuals; among homosexuals, previously a high-risk group, rates held stable. Hepatitis C, infecting about 150,000 Americans annually, remains in the blood for years and accounts for a large percentage of cirrhosis, liver failure, and liver cancer cases. Its main mode of transmission is through blood transfusion, and possibly sexual intercourse. Types D and E are less frequently seen in the U.S. (STED98)
  • INFLAMMATION of the LIVER due to hepatocellular toxicity, caused by drug metabolites and chemicals from the environment.
  • INFLAMMATION of the LIVER.
  • Inflammation of the liver; usually from a viral infection, but sometimes from toxic agents.
  • 573.3 is a specific code that can be used to specify a diagnosis
  • 573.3 contains 17 index entries


ICD-9-CM Diagnosis 573.4

Hepatic infarction

  • 573.4 is a specific code that can be used to specify a diagnosis
  • 573.4 contains 2 index entries

ICD-9-CM Diagnosis 573.8

Other specified disorders of liver

  • 573.8 is a specific code that can be used to specify a diagnosis
  • 573.8 contains 36 index entries

ICD-9-CM Diagnosis 573.9

Unspecified disorder of liver

  • Any disease or dysfunction of the liver and the intrahepatic bile ducts.
  • Pathological processes of the LIVER.
  • 573.9 is a specific code that can be used to specify a diagnosis
  • 573.9 contains 11 index entries