Anesthesia Coding Alert

You Be the Coder:

Intubation and Extubation by Different Groups

Question: Our anesthesiologist extubated a patient who was intubated by a physician in a different group. How should I report the extubation?

California Subscriber Answer: CPT Codes has a code for intubation (31500, Intubation, endotracheal, emergency procedure) but no  code for extubation. If you have enough documentation, you can bill an E/M service. Code 99231 (Subsequent hospital care, per day, for the evaluation and management of a patient, which requires at least two of these three key components: a problem-focused interval history; a problem-focused examination; medical decision-making that is straightforward or of low complexity) is the most likely code for this case (though check the documentation to see if you should code a consult or ICU visit instead).

If the physician did not document enough to merit coding an E/M visit, report 31599 (Unlisted procedure, larynx) and file with the documentation.
You’ve reached your limit of free articles. Already a subscriber? Log in.
Not a subscriber? Subscribe today to continue reading this article. Plus, you’ll get:
  • Simple explanations of current healthcare regulations and payer programs
  • Real-world reporting scenarios solved by our expert coders
  • Industry news, such as MAC and RAC activities, the OIG Work Plan, and CERT reports
  • Instant access to every article ever published in your eNewsletter
  • 6 annual AAPC-approved CEUs*
  • The latest updates for CPT®, ICD-10-CM, HCPCS Level II, NCCI edits, modifiers, compliance, technology, practice management, and more
*CEUs available with select eNewsletters.

Other Articles in this issue of

Anesthesia Coding Alert

View All