H44.2D ICD 10 Code is a non-billable and non-specific code and should not be used to indicate a diagnosis for reimbursement purposes. There are other codes below it with greater level of diagnosis detail. The 2023 edition of the American ICD-10-CM code became effective on October 1, 2022.
Codes
- H44.2D1 Degenerative myopia with foveoschisis, right eye
- H44.2D2 Degenerative myopia with foveoschisis, left eye
- H44.2D3 Degenerative myopia with foveoschisis, bilateral eye
- H44.2D9 Degenerative myopia with foveoschisis, unspecified eye
Possible back-references that may be applicable or related to H44.2D ICD10 Code:
- H00-H59 Diseases of the eye and adnexa
- H43-H44 Disorders of vitreous body and globe
- H44 Disorders of globe
- H44.0 Purulent endophthalmitis
- H44.1 Other endophthalmitis
- H44.2 Degenerative myopia
- H44.3 Other and unspecified degenerative disorders of globe
- H44.4 Hypotony of eye
- H44.5 Degenerated conditions of globe
- H44.6 Retained (old) intraocular foreign body, magnetic
- H44.7 Retained (old) intraocular foreign body, nonmagnetic
- H44.8 Other disorders of globe
Present On Admission (POA Exempt)
H44.2D ICD 10 code is considered exempt from POA reporting
Clinical information about H44.2D ICD 10 code
The cornea and lens of your eye helps you focus. Refractive errors are vision problems that happen when the shape of the eye keeps you from focusing well. The cause could be the length of the eyeball (longer or shorter), changes in the shape of the cornea, or aging of the lens.
Four common refractive errors are:
- Myopia, or nearsightedness - clear vision close up but blurry in the distance
- Hyperopia, or farsightedness - clear vision in the distance but blurry close up
- Presbyopia - inability to focus close up as a result of aging
- Astigmatism - focus problems caused by the cornea
The most common symptom is blurred vision. Other symptoms may include double vision, haziness, glare or halos around bright lights, squinting, headaches, or eye strain.
Glasses or contact lenses can usually correct refractive errors. Laser eye surgery may also be a possibility.
NIH: National Eye Institute
The information in this box was provided by MedlinePlus.gov