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Austinida June 16, 2025 8:14 am
Hello! D9222 and D9223 are billed specifically in 15 minute increments, so if it is under 30 minutes, it is not recommended to bill for both D9222 and D9223 (total of 30 minutes) if only 20 minutes of sedation were performed.
asked 6 months ago by
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Austinida June 17, 2025 8:02 am
Hello! Since you were referred to the specialist by another provider, and not seen by the original referring dentist, the code D9310 (Consultation- Diagnostic service provided by dentist or physician other than requesting dentist or physician) was appropriately applied. Alternatively, D0160 ( Detailed and extensive oral evaluation, problem-focused, by report) could also be used, as (more)
asked 6 months ago by
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Anonymous May 15, 2025 2:13 pm
Depending how old the child is the bitewing could also be D0272
asked 7 months ago by
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AR April 7, 2025 3:54 pm
Hello! This is a great question. For D4910, each insurance plan is different. If the patient has coverage for D4910, typically, the insurance will want the date of the initial scaling and root planing along with x-rays and perio charting less than 12 months old. When it comes to the perio maintenance frequency, that also (more)
asked 9 months ago by
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AR April 7, 2025 3:57 pm
Hi! In past offices, we have used code D9310: Consultation - Diagnostic service provided by dentist or physician other than requesting dentist or physician.
asked 9 months ago by
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Christina February 27, 2025 10:48 am
Your CPT code is the D7220 and D 7230. (The extraction is the procedure) You won’t have a modifier. Your diagnosis code will come from a ICD 10 code book. This is the why it’s being pulled. Are they impacted,, etc that’s the code you would put . If you tell me why it’s being (more)
asked 10 months ago by
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Lori May 7, 2025 2:13 pm
The American Dental Association has said it's a matter of clinical judgement of the dentist. It is appropriately reported as D4910, but if the treating dentist determines the patient can be treated with routine prophylaxis, then D1110 may be appropriate.
asked 11 months ago by
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medaudsolutions April 8, 2025 3:21 pm
Agree with prior post, dentist do not usually charge a lab fee. BE careful charging more than the allowed amount on contracted plans and covered services; that is a compliance no no.
asked 1 year ago by
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Austinida April 8, 2025 2:15 pm
Hello! The patient's secondary insurance always needs to be billed to ensure accurate procedure history, regardless of the amount of the primary insurance's payment. Hope this helps!!
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