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T82ICD-10-CM

Chapter 19 · S00–T88 · Injury, Poisoning & External Causes

Complications of cardiac and vascular prosthetic devices, implants and grafts

Learn about T82, the ICD10 code for Complications of cardiac and vascular prosthetic devices, implants and grafts. Understand symptoms, diagnosis, usage, and related codes.

What T82 covers · when clinicians use it

ICD-10 code T82 identifies Complications of cardiac and vascular prosthetic devices, implants and grafts in the U.S. ICD-10-CM clinical and billing record set. It sits within the Injury, Poisoning & External Causes chapter (S00–T88), the section that groups related diagnoses so providers, payers, and public-health agencies report them consistently. Clinicians and medical coders apply T82 when an encounter's findings match the Complications of cardiac and vascular prosthetic devices, implants and grafts 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 T82 against the current CMS/CDC release and your payer's documentation guidance before final use. This page summarizes documentation context for T82 and is a coding reference, not clinical, diagnostic, or billing advice.

Complications of cardiac and vascular prosthetic devices, implants and grafts (T82) covers complications that arise from trauma, medical procedures, infusions, surgeries, and prosthetic or transplant-related interventions. Proper identification and documentation of these complications are vital for ensuring appropriate follow-up care, mitigating risks, and supporting claims processing.

Symptoms

  • Fever, redness, or swelling at surgical or device sites
  • Unexpected bleeding or discharge
  • Organ dysfunction following transplantation
  • Pain or mechanical failure in prosthetic devices
  • Sepsis or systemic infection symptoms
  • Wound dehiscence or delayed healing
  • Graft rejection or thrombosis

Diagnosis

Diagnosis of complications involves clinical examination, imaging studies (X-rays, CT scans, ultrasounds), laboratory tests (infection markers, organ function tests), and device assessments. In transplant cases, biopsies may be needed to identify rejection. Prompt diagnosis ensures timely intervention, reduces morbidity, and improves overall patient outcomes.

ICD10 Code Usage

The ICD10 code T82 is crucial in hospital records, surgical reports, discharge summaries, and insurance claims. It provides clarity on post-operative or post-procedural complications, facilitating better patient tracking, risk management strategies, legal documentation, and reimbursement workflows.

Related Codes

FAQs

Q1: What does ICD10 code T82 refer to?
A: It documents complications following trauma, procedures, prosthetic implantations, or organ transplantation.

Q2: Are these complications preventable?
A: Many complications are preventable with best surgical practices, but some risks are inherent to procedures.

Q3: Can complications appear late after surgery?
A: Yes, some complications, especially with implants and grafts, may develop months or even years later.

Q4: How are transplant complications managed?
A: Management includes immunosuppressive therapy, monitoring for rejection, and infection control.

Q5: Why is proper coding of complications important?
A: It ensures accurate patient care records, justifies extended treatments, and supports insurance billing and reporting needs.

Conclusion

Accurately coding complications using ICD10 code T82 ensures comprehensive patient care, optimizes treatment outcomes, improves hospital reporting, and strengthens healthcare system quality and accountability for trauma, surgical, and transplant-related issues.

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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