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Chapter Outline . Introduce students toForms of anesthesiaAnesthesia guidelinesAnesthesia modifiers . Anesthesia Guidelines. Anesthesia service includesUsual preoperative and postoperative visitsAdministration of the anesthetic for the site of surgeryAnesthesia care during the procedureAdmini
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1. 2007 – PMCCAnesthesiaChapter 18
2. Chapter Outline Introduce students to
Forms of anesthesia
Anesthesia guidelines
Anesthesia modifiers
3. Anesthesia Guidelines Anesthesia service includes
Usual preoperative and postoperative visits
Administration of the anesthetic for the site of surgery
Anesthesia care during the procedure
Administration of fluids and/or blood replacement
Interpretation of noninvasive monitoring (blood pressure, ECG, temperature, oximetry, apnography, and mass spectrometry)
Time
Key element for reimbursement
Starts when anesthesiologist begins preparing patient in OR
Ends when anesthesiologist no longer in personal attendance and patient is safely placed under postoperative supervision
4. Anesthesia Guidelines Time continued
May be reported in units based on defined time increments
Most common is 15 minutes (1 unit for each 15 minutes)
Medicare requires time reported in actual minutes, not units
Anesthesia provided during multiple surgical procedures
Reported by listing the anesthesia cod with highest base unit value and reporting total time of all procedures
Separate payment allowed for selected services in conjunction with anesthesia or unrelated procedure
Insertion of Swan-Ganz catheter (93503)
Central venous pressure line (36555-36597)
Arterial line (36620-36625)
5. Medicare Guidelines Anesthesia services
Provided by or under supervision of a physician
Services may include, but not limited to
General or regional anesthesia
Monitoring of physiological parameters during local or peripheral block anesthesia with sedation
Other supportive services in order to afford the patient anesthesia care deemed optimal by the anesthesiologist during any procedure
Codes describe
General anatomic area or service
Usually relates to a number of surgical procedures
Only one anesthesia code reported unless code is an add-on code
6. Anesthesia Modifiers Three sets of modifiers to consider
Physical status
HCPCS
CPT
CPT manual also includes codes for
Reporting circumstances that could increase the difficulty of providing anesthesia
7. Physical Status Modifiers P1—Normal, healthy patient
P2—Patient with mild systemic disease (eg, mild, benign, hypertensive heart disease) well controlled on medication
P3—Patient with severe systemic disease (eg, benign, hypertensive heart and renal disease with congestive heart and renal failure)
P4—Patient with severe systemic disease that is a constant threat to life (eg, hypertrophic obstetric cardiomyopathy with ESRD) awaiting heart transplant
P5– Moribund patient who is not expected to survive without surgery
P6—A declared brain dead patient whose organs are being removed for donor purposes
8. CPT Modifiers 22—Unusual Procedural Services
23—Unusual Anesthesia (Identifies a procedure that usually requires no anesthesia or local anesthesia. Under unusual circumstances, general anesthesia is required)
32—Mandated Services
51—Multiple Services
53—Discontinued Procedure
59—Distinct Procedural Service (Identifies certain circumstances when a physician may need to indicate that a procedure/service was distinct or independent from other services performed on the same day)
9. HCPCS Level II Modifiers AA—Anesthesia service performed personally by anesthesiologist
AD—Medical supervision by a physician: more than four concurrent anesthesia procedures
G8—Monitored anesthesia care (MAC) for deep complex, complicated, or markedly invasive surgical procedure
G9—Monitored anesthesia care for patient who has history of severe cardiopulmonary condition
QB—Physician providing service in a rural HPSA
QK—Medical direction of two, three, or four concurrent anesthesia procedures involving qualified individuals
QS—Monitored anesthesia care service (MAC)
QX—Certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA) service, with medical direction by a physician
QY—Medical direction of one certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA) by an anesthesiologist
QZ—CRNA service, without medical direction by a physician
10. Types of Anesthesia General Anesthesia
Results in loss of consciousness
Produces amnesia by blocking the awareness center in the brain
CPT codes 00100-01999 represent general anesthesia unless code description states otherwise
Regional Anesthesia
Blocks all painful sensation to the specific region of the body innervated by the nerve or nerve plexus receiving the anesthetic
Does not induce unconsciousness
11. Types of Anesthesia Peripheral Nerve Blocks
Anesthetize individual nerves or nerve plexuses
Anesthetic agent injected along the nerve rather than in the nerve
Codes 64400-64530
Used to describe these services
Nerve Blocks
Anesthetize entire regions
Spinal Anesthesia
Used for major procedures performed below level of the diaphragm
Relatively safe
Provides excellent muscle relaxation
Accomplished by placing needle between the vertebrae and injecting anesthetic agent into the subarachnoid space
Frequently used for pain management by anesthesiologists
12. Types of Anesthesia Epidural Anesthesia
Achieved by injecting anesthetic agent into epidural space of thoracic or lumbar interspaces
Usually avoid postoperative headaches
Intravenous Regional Blocks
Used for some procedures on extremities
Pneumatic tourniquet applied to the limb and anesthetic agent is injected into the vein of the limb distal to the tourniquet
Field Block
Used to form barrier between operative site and nervous system
Accomplished by multiple injections of local anesthetic agent
Local Anesthesia
Applied topically or by local infiltration
13. Pain Management Benefits of proper pain management
Shorter hospital stays
Increased mobilization
Acute Pain
May be experienced during postoperative period
Included in surgeon’s fee
Should only be turned over to a specialist when special circumstances warrant this level of service
Documentation must exist within medical record to indicate why services of anesthesiologist are needed
14. Pain Management Pain management options may include
Cognitive, behavioral interventions such as education, relaxation, distraction, biofeedback
Systemic administration of a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) or opiates
Patient controlled analgesia (PCA)
Spinal analgesia
Intermittent or continuous nerve block
Physical agents (eg, massage) application of heat or cold modalities
Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulator (TENS)
Chronic Pain
Pain that does not resolve itself after 3-6 months
Treated by variety of modalities
15. Monitored Anesthesia Care (MAC) At times, an anesthesiologist may be called upon to
Provide specific anesthesia services to a patient undergoing planned procedure, when patient may receive local or no anesthesia at all
MAC should be reported by using
Modifier QS
Documentation for medical necessity
Should be evident in patient’s record
Medicare
Wants modifier G8 or G9 to be reported, if applicable
16. Procedural Coding Spine and Spinal Cord (00600-00670)
New codes for 2007
00625 Anesthesia for procedures on the thoracic spine and cord, via an anterior transthoracic approach; not utilizing one lung ventilation
00626 Anesthesia for procedures on the thoracic spine and cord, via an anterior transthoracic approach; utilizing one lung ventilation
17. Procedural Coding Knee and Popliteal Area (01320-01444)
Regional anesthesia for knee surgery has three separate steps
Epidural/spinal anesthesia pain during the surgery
Femoral nerve block helps to manage pain after the surgery
Sedation during surgery
Lower Leg (Below Knee, Includes Ankle and Foot) (01462-01522)
Sciatic nerve used to numb only the leg and foot scheduled for surgery
Other leg not affected
When needle is close to correct position, patient’s foot will move on its own
Once needle in proper position, nerve block medicine is injected
18. Procedural Coding Shoulder and Axilla (01610-01682)
Nerves of should and arm
Located on side of the neck, just above collarbone
Single injection into nerves will numb shoulder for 12-24 hours
Numbing affects only the side scheduled for surgery
Radiological Procedures (01905-01933)
Interventional radiology using fluoroscopy, ultrasound, CT and MRI
Often performed under local anesthesia with IV sedation
General anesthesia may be provided to patients who have had difficulty with sedation, or have coexisting medical conditions
19. Procedural Coding Burn Excisions or Debridement (01951-01953)
Local or general anesthesia
May be used when surgically debriding burns
Tip: Burns in the OR—most burns (58%) in the OR are from devices used to warm the patient, including IV bags and warming devices, cautery devices caused from burns either by grounding pads or by causing a fire. Miscellaneous devices associated with burns included MRI, retractors, defibrillator paddles, and ECG leads.
20. Procedural Coding Obstetrical Anesthesia (01958-01969)
Several different forms of anesthesia administered for childbirth
May be used independently or in conjunction with one another
Most commonly administered
Local
Regional
21. Qualifying Circumstances Anesthesiologists and CRNAs should use these add-on codes to report
Situations that make administering anesthesia particularly difficult
Medicare does not pay for the following add-on services
+99100 — Anesthesia for a patient of extreme age, under one year or over 70
+99116 — Anesthesia complicated by utilization of total body hypothermia
+99135 — Anesthesia complicated by utilization of controlled hypotension
+99140 — Anesthesia complicated by emergency conditions (specify)
22. Moderate Conscious Sedation (99143-99150) Located in the Medicine Section of CPT
Drug induced depression of consciousness
Allows patient to
Respond purposefully to verbal commands, either alone or accompanied by light tactile stimulation
May be administered in
Hospitals
Outpatient facilities
23. Moderate Conscious Sedation (99143-99150) Services that are included in moderate conscious sedation
Assessment of patient (not included in intraservice time)
Establishment of IV access and fluids to maintain patency, when performed
Administration of agent(s)
Maintenance of sedation
Monitoring of oxygen saturation, heart rate, and blood pressure
Recovery (not included in intraservice time)
Code 99143—clarifies use of moderate conscious sedation services; sedation provided by same physician performing the diagnostic/therapeutic service, younger than 5 years of age, first 30 minutes of intraservice time
Codes 99144 and 99145—further clarify age and time constraints
Code 99148—clarifies use of a second provider; under age 5 years of age, first 30 minutes intraservice time
24. Anesthesia Crosswalk Anesthesia codes
Do not often correspond on a one-to-one basis with surgery codes
Approximately 40,000
Surgical, medical and radiological procedures represented by nearly260 anesthesia codes
Anesthesia codes
Arranged based on anatomical areas
Important to utilize a crosswalk such as
ASA Crosswalk – A Guide for Surgery/Anesthesia CPT Codes
25. The End