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R61ICD-10-CM

Chapter 18 · R00–R99 · Symptoms, Signs & Abnormal Findings

Generalized hyperhidrosis

R61 is the ICD10 code used for documenting Generalized hyperhidrosis involving general symptoms without a specific diagnosis.

What R61 covers · when clinicians use it

ICD-10 code R61 identifies Generalized hyperhidrosis in the U.S. ICD-10-CM clinical and billing record set. It sits within the Symptoms, Signs & Abnormal Findings chapter (R00–R99), the section that groups related diagnoses so providers, payers, and public-health agencies report them consistently. Clinicians and medical coders apply R61 when an encounter's findings match the Generalized hyperhidrosis 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 R61 against the current CMS/CDC release and your payer's documentation guidance before final use. This page summarizes documentation context for R61 and is a coding reference, not clinical, diagnostic, or billing advice.

R61 refers to Generalized hyperhidrosis, capturing general clinical symptoms like unexplained fever, fatigue, pain, dizziness, convulsions, hemorrhage, edema, weight loss, or signs of systemic illness when a specific diagnosis is pending or not evident.

Symptoms

  • Persistent fever without clear cause – Common in R50
  • Frequent or severe headaches – Seen in R51
  • Unexplained body pain – Associated with R52
  • General weakness or tiredness – Linked to R53
  • Fainting episodes – Classified under R55
  • Seizures not otherwise explained – Related to R56
  • Severe systemic collapse or shock – Coded under R57
  • Sudden bleeding without trauma – R58
  • Swollen lymph nodes – R59

Diagnosis

Clinicians investigate such symptoms using blood panels, imaging scans (CT, MRI), lumbar punctures (for convulsions), biopsies (for enlarged lymph nodes), and metabolic evaluations to determine underlying causes like infections, autoimmune conditions, malignancies, or neurological diseases.

ICD10 Code Usage

ICD10 code R61 is crucial for documenting nonspecific but clinically important signs, supporting medical workup, insurance claims, emergency triaging, and specialist referrals.

Related Codes

FAQs

Q1: What is ICD10 code R61?
A: It documents Generalized hyperhidrosis when a specific underlying disease is unclear at the time of clinical presentation.

Q2: When is fever coded without known cause?
A: When infections, cancers, or autoimmune causes have not yet been identified.

Q3: How serious is syncope?
A: While often benign, it can indicate serious cardiac, neurological, or metabolic conditions needing evaluation.

Q4: What does cachexia indicate?
A: It usually reflects advanced disease like cancer, heart failure, or chronic infection leading to wasting syndrome.

Q5: Why code generalized symptoms?
A: Proper documentation ensures monitoring, insurance coverage, and facilitates diagnostic follow-up if symptoms persist.

Conclusion

ICD10 code R61 helps clinicians document Generalized hyperhidrosis efficiently, ensuring proper clinical vigilance, accurate medical reporting, and appropriate follow-up planning when diagnoses are uncertain.

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.

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