ICD-10-CM Exhaustion, exhaustive (physical NEC) References

"Exhaustion, exhaustive (physical NEC)" Annotation Back-References in the ICD-10-CM Index to Diseases and Injuries

Browse the ICD-10-CM codes with references applicable to the clinical term "exhaustion, exhaustive (physical nec)"

  • Exhaustion, exhaustive (physical NEC) - R53.83 Other fatigue
    • battle - F43.0 Acute stress reaction
    • cardiac - See: Failure, heart;
    • delirium - F43.0 Acute stress reaction
    • due to
      • cold - T69.8 Other specified effects of reduced temperature
      • excessive exertion - T73.3 Exhaustion due to excessive exertion
      • exposure - T73.2 Exhaustion due to exposure
      • neurasthenia - F48.8 Other specified nonpsychotic mental disorders
    • heart - See: Failure, heart;
    • heat - See Also: Heat, exhaustion; - T67.5 Heat exhaustion, unspecified
      • due to
        • salt depletion - T67.4 Heat exhaustion due to salt depletion
        • water depletion - T67.3 Heat exhaustion, anhydrotic
    • maternal, complicating delivery - O75.81 Maternal exhaustion complicating labor and delivery
    • mental - F48.8 Other specified nonpsychotic mental disorders
    • myocardium, myocardial - See: Failure, heart;
    • nervous - F48.8 Other specified nonpsychotic mental disorders
    • old age - R54 Age-related physical debility
    • psychogenic - F48.8 Other specified nonpsychotic mental disorders
    • psychosis - F43.0 Acute stress reaction
    • senile - R54 Age-related physical debility
    • vital NEC - Z73.0 Burn-out

Applicable Clinical Terms Definitions

Delirium: A disorder characterized by CONFUSION; inattentiveness; disorientation; ILLUSIONS; HALLUCINATIONS; agitation; and in some instances autonomic nervous system overactivity. It may result from toxic/metabolic conditions or structural brain lesions. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp411-2)

Heart: The hollow, muscular organ that maintains the circulation of the blood.

Psychotic Disorders: Disorders in which there is a loss of ego boundaries or a gross impairment in reality testing with delusions or prominent hallucinations. (From DSM-IV, 1994)