93000
Electrocardiogram, complete, with interpretation and report
A complete electrocardiogram (ECG) involves the recording of electrical activity of the heart from at least 12 leads, providing a comprehensive view of cardiac electrical function. This code encompasses the entire service: the technical component (tracing), the professional component (interpretation by a physician or other qualified healthcare professional), and the generation of a written report documenting the findings.
Clinical Indications
- Evaluation of chest pain or discomfort suggestive of cardiac ischemia
- Assessment of palpitations or cardiac arrhythmias
- Investigation of syncope, presyncope, or dizziness
- Screening for cardiac disease in high-risk individuals (e.g., family history of sudden cardiac death, certain pre-participation physicals)
- Monitoring of known cardiac conditions (e.g., coronary artery disease, heart failure, cardiomyopathy)
- Preoperative assessment prior to non-cardiac surgery in patients with known or suspected cardiac disease
- Evaluation of shortness of breath, fatigue, or other symptoms suggestive of cardiac dysfunction
- Assessment of electrolyte imbalances that can affect cardiac rhythm
- Monitoring effects of cardiotoxic medications
Procedure Steps
- Patient preparation: Explanation of the procedure, ensuring patient comfort and proper positioning.
- Skin preparation: Cleaning of electrode sites to ensure good electrical contact and minimize artifact.
- Electrode placement: Application of at least 10 electrodes to specific anatomical locations on the chest and limbs to record 12 standard leads (I, II, III, aVR, aVL, aVF, V1-V6).
- ECG recording: Acquisition of a stable, high-quality tracing over several cardiac cycles.
- Quality check: Review of the tracing for artifacts and repetition if necessary.
- Interpretation: Systematic analysis of the ECG waveform by a physician or other qualified healthcare professional, assessing rhythm, rate, PR interval, QRS duration, QT interval, axis, presence of P waves, QRS complexes, ST segments, and T waves.
- Report generation: Creation of a written report summarizing the ECG findings and clinical impressions, which becomes part of the patient's medical record.
Coding Guidelines
- CPT code 93000 is a global code that includes the technical component (recording) and the professional component (interpretation and report).
- If only the technical component is performed, report CPT code 93005 (Electrocardiogram, complete, with interpretation and report; tracing only, without interpretation and report).
- If only the interpretation and report are performed, report CPT code 93010 (Electrocardiogram, complete, with interpretation and report; interpretation and report only).
- A complete 12-lead ECG is typically required for this code. If fewer leads are recorded, the medical record must justify the clinical necessity of a 'complete' study or a more appropriate code may be considered.
- A separate interpretation and report by a physician or other qualified healthcare professional is mandatory for billing 93000 or 93010. Automated computer interpretations alone are not sufficient.
- Routine screening ECGs may not be covered by all payers; medical necessity must be clearly documented.
- This code has a global period of 0 days, meaning follow-up care related to the ECG itself is not bundled into the payment.
Associated ICD-10 Codes
- R07.9 - Chest pain, unspecified
- I47.1 - Supraventricular tachycardia
- I48.0 - Paroxysmal atrial fibrillation
- I25.10 - Atherosclerotic heart disease of native coronary artery without angina pectoris
- R00.2 - Palpitations
- R55 - Syncope and collapse
- I44.1 - Atrioventricular block, second degree
- I50.9 - Heart failure, unspecified
- R06.02 - Shortness of breath