Start New EnglishEspañol中文РусскийالعربيةTiếng ViệtFrançaisDeutsch한국어Tagalog Library Performance

2025 ICD-10-CM code T36.0X1A

Accidental poisoning by penicillins, initial encounter.

Use secondary code(s) from Chapter 20, External causes of morbidity, to indicate cause of injury. Do not code conditions that are an integral part of the disease process. For conditions that are not an integral part of the disease process, use an additional code to identify manifestations of poisoning.

Medical necessity for the treatment of accidental penicillin poisoning is established by the documented signs and symptoms and the clinician's assessment of the severity of the poisoning. Treatment may range from observation to supportive care to more aggressive interventions depending on the specific situation.

The clinician is responsible for documenting the details of the penicillin poisoning, including the type of penicillin involved, the route of exposure, the amount ingested (if known), and the resulting signs and symptoms.They should also document any treatment provided and the patient's response to treatment.

In simple words: Accidental penicillin overdose, first visit.

Poisoning by penicillins, accidental (unintentional), initial encounter.

Example 1: A 2-year-old child accidentally ingests their grandparent's amoxicillin pills and is brought to the emergency room with vomiting and a rash. This is their first visit for this issue., A teenager attempts suicide by overdosing on penicillin and presents to the hospital with altered mental status and seizures. This is their initial encounter for this event., An elderly patient with dementia accidentally takes double their prescribed dose of penicillin for several days and is brought to the doctor's office with confusion and lethargy. This is the first time they are seen for this particular poisoning incident.

Documentation should include the type of penicillin if known, the route of exposure (ingestion, injection, etc.), the approximate amount or duration of exposure, and the clinical manifestations of the poisoning. Any treatment given should also be documented. External cause codes (Chapter 20) should be used to identify the cause of the accidental poisoning, such as accidental ingestion of medication.If a foreign body is retained (e.g., pill fragments), code Z18.- should be used.

** This code is specifically for accidental (unintentional) poisoning.It represents the initial encounter for the poisoning event. The placeholder 'X' is used because a sixth character is required for the encounter status (A = initial encounter), but there is no fifth character code for this particular type of penicillin poisoning.Always use the most specific code available. If the specific type of penicillin is known, use a more specific code (T36.1X1A-T36.9X4S). This code excludes poisoning due to antineoplastic antibiotics (T45.1), locally applied antibiotics (T49.0), topically used antibiotics for the ear, nose, and throat (T49.6), and topically used antibiotics for the eye (T49.5).

** Only Enterprise users with EHR integration can access case-specific answers. Click here to request access.

Discover what matters.

iFrame™ AI's knowledge is aligned with and limited to the materials uploaded by users and should not be interpreted as medical, legal, or any other form of advice by iFrame™.