Back to ICD-10 codes
P58ICD-10-CM

Chapter 16 · P00–P96 · Perinatal Period Conditions

Neonatal jaundice due to other excessive hemolysis

P58 is the ICD10 code used for documenting Neonatal jaundice due to other excessive hemolysis during the neonatal period.

What P58 covers · when clinicians use it

ICD-10 code P58 identifies Neonatal jaundice due to other excessive hemolysis in the U.S. ICD-10-CM clinical and billing record set. It sits within the Perinatal Period Conditions chapter (P00–P96), the section that groups related diagnoses so providers, payers, and public-health agencies report them consistently. Clinicians and medical coders apply P58 when an encounter's findings match the Neonatal jaundice due to other excessive hemolysis description, attaching it to the patient record so downstream insurance claims, payer audits, quality reporting, and epidemiological surveillance all reference the same standardized diagnosis. The ICD-10-CM is maintained by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics, with an updated official code set released each U.S. fiscal year — always verify P58 against the current CMS/CDC release and your payer's documentation guidance before final use. This page summarizes documentation context for P58 and is a coding reference, not clinical, diagnostic, or billing advice.

P58 refers to Neonatal jaundice due to other excessive hemolysis, documenting neonatal blood-related complications such as hemorrhage, jaundice, hemolysis, and clotting disorders that often require urgent NICU interventions.

Symptoms

  • Severe anemia – Common in intrauterine blood loss (P50)
  • Umbilical bleeding – Suggestive of clotting or trauma issues (P51)
  • Seizures or altered consciousness – Signs of intracranial hemorrhage (P52)
  • Jaundice – Seen in hemolytic disease and kernicterus (P55, P57)
  • Edema and fluid accumulation – Features of hydrops fetalis (P56)

Diagnosis

Diagnosis of Neonatal jaundice due to other excessive hemolysis involves complete blood counts (CBC), coagulation profiles, bilirubin levels, cranial ultrasound or MRI for brain hemorrhages, umbilical cultures if infection suspected, and direct Coombs test for hemolytic disease evaluation.

ICD10 Code Usage

ICD10 code P58 is essential for neonatologists, pediatricians, and hematologists to accurately document neonatal bleeding disorders, hemolytic diseases, and related conditions affecting blood composition during the perinatal period.

Related Codes

FAQs

Q1: What is ICD10 code P58?
A: It refers to Neonatal jaundice due to other excessive hemolysis, highlighting neonatal conditions involving bleeding, hemolysis, jaundice, or clotting abnormalities detected after birth.

Q2: How dangerous is kernicterus (P57)?
A: Kernicterus is a medical emergency where high bilirubin levels cause permanent brain damage if untreated.

Q3: What causes hemolytic disease of the newborn (P55)?
A: It often results from blood group incompatibility between mother and fetus (e.g., Rh incompatibility).

Q4: How is neonatal jaundice treated?
A: Treatment includes phototherapy, exchange transfusion, and treating underlying hemolysis if present.

Q5: What is DIC in newborns (P60)?
A: Disseminated intravascular coagulation is a critical condition where widespread clotting depletes clotting factors, causing uncontrolled bleeding.

Conclusion

ICD10 code P58 enables healthcare teams to systematically capture and manage Neonatal jaundice due to other excessive hemolysis, supporting prompt treatment of blood-related complications in the vulnerable neonatal population.

Source: ICD-10-CM (CMS / CDC NCHS official code set)

Last reviewed:

This page is a documentation reference for the ICD-10-CM code set and is not clinical, diagnostic, or billing advice. Always verify codes against the official ICD-10-CM source and your payer's guidelines.

Stop searching codes. Start delivering care.

Augustun captures the visit, drafts the note, and proposes ICD-10 codes with rationale — trusted by 10,000+ clinicians.