R00.1
Bradycardia, unspecified
R00.1 is a clinical designation for an abnormally slow heart rate, typically defined as fewer than 60 beats per minute in an adult at rest. While bradycardia can be a normal finding in highly trained athletes or during deep sleep, it is considered clinically significant when the heart is unable to pump enough oxygen-rich blood to the body. This code is specifically used when the underlying cause of the slow heart rate—such as sinus node dysfunction, atrioventricular block, or metabolic disturbances—has not yet been identified or specified by the clinician. Evaluation typically involves an electrocardiogram (ECG) to determine if the bradycardia is sinus in origin or representative of a more complex conduction system delay.
Clinical Symptoms
- Dizziness or lightheadedness
- Syncope (fainting) or near-syncope
- Fatigue or lethargy
- Shortness of breath (dyspnea)
- Chest pain (angina)
- Confusion or difficulty concentrating
- Exercise intolerance
- Weakness
Common Causes
- Aging and age-related wear on heart tissues
- Damage to heart tissues from myocardial infarction (heart attack)
- Congenital heart defects
- Infection of heart tissue (myocarditis or endocarditis)
- Complication of heart surgery
- Hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid)
- Electrolyte imbalances (particularly high potassium levels or hyperkalemia)
- Obstructive sleep apnea
- Inflammatory diseases such as rheumatic fever or lupus
- Medications including beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, and digoxin
Documentation & Coding Tips
Distinguish between physiologic bradycardia and pathologic bradycardia to ensure accurate code selection and medical necessity for diagnostic testing.
Example: Patient is a 24-year-old competitive marathon runner presenting for annual physical. Resting heart rate noted at 42 bpm. Patient is asymptomatic with no history of syncope, dizziness, or exercise intolerance. This is assessed as physiologic bradycardia due to high level of athletic conditioning. Billing focus: Encounter for general adult medical examination without abnormal findings. Risk adjustment: Condition is noted as a normal variant for this specific patient population, limiting risk score impact.
Billing Focus: Documentation should reflect the absence of symptoms to support the use of R00.1 in a screening or routine context versus a symptomatic diagnostic context.
Clearly document any associated symptoms such as syncope, lightheadedness, or shortness of breath to justify the medical necessity of cardiac monitoring.
Example: 72-year-old female presents with recurrent episodes of near-syncope and generalized fatigue. Vital signs show a pulse of 48 bpm. EKG confirms sinus bradycardia without heart block. The bradycardia is symptomatic and likely contributing to the patient's dizziness. Billing focus: Primary diagnosis R00.1, secondary diagnosis R42 (Dizziness and giddiness). Risk adjustment: Symptomatic bradycardia may indicate underlying conduction system disease which increases the patient's clinical complexity profile.
Billing Focus: Symptom linking is critical for supporting the level of medical decision making (MDM) for E/M services and the ordering of Holter monitors.
When bradycardia is caused by a medication, document the specific drug and whether it is a correctly administered therapeutic dose or an overdose.
Example: Patient with known hypertension and atrial fibrillation presents with a heart rate of 44 bpm. Patient has been taking Metoprolol Succinate 50mg daily as prescribed. Assessment: Symptomatic bradycardia due to adverse effect of beta-blocker therapy. Billing focus: R00.1 and T44.7X5A (Adverse effect of beta-adrenoceptor antagonists, initial encounter). Risk adjustment: Use of adverse effect codes provides a higher level of specificity regarding the etiology of the bradycardia.
Billing Focus: Requires a T-code for the drug causing the adverse effect to ensure proper claim processing for medication-induced conditions.
Specify the exact type of conduction abnormality if known, as R00.1 is a non-specific code for use only when a more specific diagnosis cannot be made.
Example: EKG performed in office reveals a heart rate of 45 bpm with a PR interval of 0.24 seconds. Assessment: Bradycardia secondary to Atrioventricular block, first degree. Billing focus: Code I44.0 (Atrioventricular block, first degree) must be used instead of the non-specific R00.1. Risk adjustment: I44.0 is a more specific conduction disorder and provides clearer data for population health management.
Billing Focus: Specificity in conduction disorders (1st, 2nd, or 3rd degree block) is required for accurate coding and to avoid denials for unspecified symptoms.
Document the stability of the condition and any interventions planned, such as pacemaker interrogation or referral to electrophysiology.
Example: Patient with history of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction presents with persistent sinus bradycardia of 50 bpm. Patient is currently stable but reports reduced exercise tolerance. Plan: Referral to Electrophysiology for evaluation of Sick Sinus Syndrome. Billing focus: R00.1 as a sign/symptom for the specialist referral. Risk adjustment: Comorbidity of HFrEF (I50.22) must be documented as it significantly increases the risk profile of managing bradycardia.
Billing Focus: Documentation of the referral helps justify higher level E/M codes (99214) based on the management of a chronic condition with exacerbation or new problem.
Relevant CPT Codes
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93000 - Electrocardiogram, routine ECG with at least 12 leads; with interpretation and report
Essential for confirming bradycardia and identifying conduction abnormalities.
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93224 - External electrocardiographic recording up to 48 hours by continuous rhythm recording and storage; includes recording, scanning analysis with report, review and interpretation by a physician or other qualified health care professional
Used when office EKG is normal but the patient has symptoms suggestive of transient bradycardia.
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99213 - Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient, which requires a low level of medical decision making or 20-29 minutes of total time spent on the date of the encounter
Appropriate for an established patient with one stable chronic illness or a minor problem.
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99214 - Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient, which requires a moderate level of medical decision making or 30-39 minutes of total time spent on the date of the encounter
Appropriate when the provider is managing a new problem with uncertain prognosis or chronic conditions with progression.
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93241 - External electrocardiographic recording for more than 48 hours up to 7 days by continuous rhythm recording and storage; includes recording, scanning analysis with report, review and interpretation
Necessary for patients with infrequent symptoms that may not be captured on a 48-hour monitor.
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93010 - Electrocardiogram, routine ECG with at least 12 leads; interpretation and report only
Used when the physician provides the clinical expertise to interpret the rhythm strip.
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33208 - Insertion of new or replacement of permanent pacemaker with transvenous electrode(s); atrial and ventricular
The definitive treatment for high-grade blocks or symptomatic sinus node dysfunction.
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93280 - Programmer device evaluation (in person) with iterative adjustment of the implantable device to test the function of the device and select optimal operational settings; dual lead pacemaker system
Required to ensure the device is correctly addressing the patient's bradycardia.
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99203 - Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of a new patient, which requires a low level of medical decision making or 30-44 minutes of total time spent on the date of the encounter
Used for a new patient presentation with a straightforward clinical picture.
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93041 - Rhythm ECG, 1-3 leads; tracing only without interpretation and report
Provides a quick spot check of heart rate during a visit.
Related Diagnoses
- I49.5 - Sick sinus syndrome
- I44.0 - Atrioventricular block, first degree
- I44.1 - Atrioventricular block, second degree
- I44.2 - Atrioventricular block, complete
- R55 - Syncope and collapse
- E03.9 - Hypothyroidism, unspecified
- T44.7X5A - Adverse effect of beta-adrenoceptor antagonists, initial encounter
- Z95.0 - Presence of cardiac pacemaker
- R42 - Dizziness and giddiness
- I45.5 - Other specified heart block