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Question 1 of 8
1. Question
After identifying an issue related to Urinary Diseases: Glomerulonephritis, kidney stones, urinary tract infections, chronic kidney disease, renal failure., what is the best next step? A 68-year-old patient presents for a follow-up regarding stage 3 chronic kidney disease (CKD) and essential hypertension. The physician documents both conditions in the assessment but does not explicitly state they are linked. According to the ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting, how should these conditions be reported?
Correct
Correct: According to the ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting, there is a presumed causal relationship between hypertension and chronic kidney disease. The classification system links these conditions when they are both present unless the provider’s documentation specifically states that the CKD is not related to the hypertension. Therefore, a combination code from category I12 is used, followed by a code from category N18 to identify the stage of the CKD.
Incorrect: Assigning separate codes for hypertension and CKD is incorrect because the coding guidelines mandate a presumed link between the two. Omitting the hypertension code is incorrect as it fails to capture the full clinical status of the patient and violates coding specificity. Querying the provider is unnecessary in this scenario because the ICD-10-CM guidelines provide clear instruction to assume a relationship between these two specific conditions unless documented otherwise.
Takeaway: ICD-10-CM guidelines presume a causal relationship between hypertension and chronic kidney disease, requiring the use of combination codes even without explicit physician linkage.
Incorrect
Correct: According to the ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting, there is a presumed causal relationship between hypertension and chronic kidney disease. The classification system links these conditions when they are both present unless the provider’s documentation specifically states that the CKD is not related to the hypertension. Therefore, a combination code from category I12 is used, followed by a code from category N18 to identify the stage of the CKD.
Incorrect: Assigning separate codes for hypertension and CKD is incorrect because the coding guidelines mandate a presumed link between the two. Omitting the hypertension code is incorrect as it fails to capture the full clinical status of the patient and violates coding specificity. Querying the provider is unnecessary in this scenario because the ICD-10-CM guidelines provide clear instruction to assume a relationship between these two specific conditions unless documented otherwise.
Takeaway: ICD-10-CM guidelines presume a causal relationship between hypertension and chronic kidney disease, requiring the use of combination codes even without explicit physician linkage.
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Question 2 of 8
2. Question
A stakeholder message lands in your inbox: A team is about to make a decision about Systemic Physiology: Integration of organ system functions to maintain life. as part of onboarding at a wealth manager, and the message indicates that a high-net-worth client is recovering from a condition that caused significant metabolic acidosis. The team is reviewing the physiological mechanisms that allowed the client to stabilize over a 72-hour period. Which of the following descriptions best captures the integrated physiological response required to maintain homeostasis in this scenario?
Correct
Correct: In the presence of metabolic acidosis, the body utilizes integrated systems to restore pH balance. The respiratory system provides a rapid response (respiratory compensation) by increasing ventilation to ‘blow off’ CO2, which is an acid precursor. Simultaneously, the urinary system (kidneys) provides a more powerful, though slower, response by actively secreting hydrogen ions into the urine and reabsorbing bicarbonate back into the blood. The cardiovascular system is the essential transport mechanism that moves these gases and ions between the tissues, lungs, and kidneys to maintain systemic homeostasis.
Incorrect: The approach involving sequestering metabolites or reducing tidal volume is incorrect because reducing ventilation would actually increase CO2 levels and worsen acidosis. The suggestion that aldosterone and the integumentary system are primary regulators of systemic pH is inaccurate, as aldosterone primarily manages sodium and potassium balance rather than direct acid-base regulation. Finally, the lymphatic system and gallbladder do not serve as the primary mechanisms for filtering or neutralizing systemic hydrogen ion concentrations in the blood.
Takeaway: Systemic homeostasis during acid-base disturbances relies on the immediate respiratory compensation of carbon dioxide levels and the long-term renal regulation of bicarbonate and hydrogen ions, all linked by cardiovascular transport.
Incorrect
Correct: In the presence of metabolic acidosis, the body utilizes integrated systems to restore pH balance. The respiratory system provides a rapid response (respiratory compensation) by increasing ventilation to ‘blow off’ CO2, which is an acid precursor. Simultaneously, the urinary system (kidneys) provides a more powerful, though slower, response by actively secreting hydrogen ions into the urine and reabsorbing bicarbonate back into the blood. The cardiovascular system is the essential transport mechanism that moves these gases and ions between the tissues, lungs, and kidneys to maintain systemic homeostasis.
Incorrect: The approach involving sequestering metabolites or reducing tidal volume is incorrect because reducing ventilation would actually increase CO2 levels and worsen acidosis. The suggestion that aldosterone and the integumentary system are primary regulators of systemic pH is inaccurate, as aldosterone primarily manages sodium and potassium balance rather than direct acid-base regulation. Finally, the lymphatic system and gallbladder do not serve as the primary mechanisms for filtering or neutralizing systemic hydrogen ion concentrations in the blood.
Takeaway: Systemic homeostasis during acid-base disturbances relies on the immediate respiratory compensation of carbon dioxide levels and the long-term renal regulation of bicarbonate and hydrogen ions, all linked by cardiovascular transport.
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Question 3 of 8
3. Question
During a periodic assessment of Building and dissecting medical terms. as part of gifts and entertainment at an investment firm, auditors observed that a reimbursement claim for a high-net-worth client’s ‘choledocholithotripsy’ was flagged by the compliance system for exceeding the $5,000 threshold for non-routine medical gifts. To validate the nature of the procedure for risk assessment purposes, the auditor must accurately dissect the medical term to ensure it was not a miscoded cosmetic procedure. Which of the following correctly identifies the roots and suffix of ‘choledocholithotripsy’ and its clinical meaning?
Correct
Correct: The term ‘choledocholithotripsy’ is a compound medical term where ‘chole’ refers to bile, ‘docho’ refers to the duct (specifically the common bile duct), ‘lith’ refers to a stone, and the suffix ‘tripsy’ refers to crushing. Therefore, the term describes the procedure of crushing a stone located within the common bile duct, typically performed via lithotripsy technology.
Incorrect: The second option is incorrect because it includes ‘cyst’ (sac/bladder), which would refer to the gallbladder (cholecystolithotripsy) rather than the duct. The third option is incorrect because the suffix ‘ectomy’ means surgical removal, whereas ‘tripsy’ specifically means crushing. The fourth option is incorrect because ‘cholangio’ is a more general term for bile vessels, and the dissection fails to account for the specific ‘docho’ root which identifies the common bile duct.
Takeaway: Accurate dissection of complex medical terms requires identifying specific roots like ‘docho’ for ducts versus ‘cyst’ for sacs to distinguish between distinct anatomical locations and procedures.
Incorrect
Correct: The term ‘choledocholithotripsy’ is a compound medical term where ‘chole’ refers to bile, ‘docho’ refers to the duct (specifically the common bile duct), ‘lith’ refers to a stone, and the suffix ‘tripsy’ refers to crushing. Therefore, the term describes the procedure of crushing a stone located within the common bile duct, typically performed via lithotripsy technology.
Incorrect: The second option is incorrect because it includes ‘cyst’ (sac/bladder), which would refer to the gallbladder (cholecystolithotripsy) rather than the duct. The third option is incorrect because the suffix ‘ectomy’ means surgical removal, whereas ‘tripsy’ specifically means crushing. The fourth option is incorrect because ‘cholangio’ is a more general term for bile vessels, and the dissection fails to account for the specific ‘docho’ root which identifies the common bile duct.
Takeaway: Accurate dissection of complex medical terms requires identifying specific roots like ‘docho’ for ducts versus ‘cyst’ for sacs to distinguish between distinct anatomical locations and procedures.
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Question 4 of 8
4. Question
An internal review at a payment services provider examining Laboratory Tests: Blood tests (CBC, chemistry panels, coagulation studies), urine tests, biopsies, cultures. as part of client suitability has uncovered that several physician-led laboratories are frequently billing for both a Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP) and a separate Creatinine test for the same patient on the same date of service. A data analytics review of the claims processing system over the last 12 months indicates that the automated ‘edit-to-pay’ logic is failing to flag these overlapping codes, resulting in an estimated $75,000 in overpayments. As the internal auditor evaluating the control environment, which recommendation most effectively addresses the risk of improper payment while adhering to standard coding conventions?
Correct
Correct: The most effective control is to align the claims processing system with the National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) edits. In physician-based coding (CCS-P), a Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP) includes Creatinine; therefore, billing both separately is considered ‘unbundling.’ Automating this check at the point of adjudication prevents overpayment and ensures compliance with standard coding rules without the inefficiency of manual reviews.
Incorrect: Requiring manual justification for every claim is operationally inefficient and creates a significant administrative burden for both the payer and the provider. Post-payment recovery is a reactive ‘pay-and-chase’ strategy that does not prevent the initial compliance failure or financial loss. Allowing separate billing based on timestamps is incorrect under standard NCCI guidelines, as components of a panel performed on the same day from the same patient are generally bundled regardless of the specific hour of the draw.
Takeaway: Effective internal controls for laboratory billing must utilize automated NCCI edits to prevent the unbundling of component tests from comprehensive panels.
Incorrect
Correct: The most effective control is to align the claims processing system with the National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) edits. In physician-based coding (CCS-P), a Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP) includes Creatinine; therefore, billing both separately is considered ‘unbundling.’ Automating this check at the point of adjudication prevents overpayment and ensures compliance with standard coding rules without the inefficiency of manual reviews.
Incorrect: Requiring manual justification for every claim is operationally inefficient and creates a significant administrative burden for both the payer and the provider. Post-payment recovery is a reactive ‘pay-and-chase’ strategy that does not prevent the initial compliance failure or financial loss. Allowing separate billing based on timestamps is incorrect under standard NCCI guidelines, as components of a panel performed on the same day from the same patient are generally bundled regardless of the specific hour of the draw.
Takeaway: Effective internal controls for laboratory billing must utilize automated NCCI edits to prevent the unbundling of component tests from comprehensive panels.
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Question 5 of 8
5. Question
During your tenure as client onboarding lead at a private bank, a matter arises concerning Neurological Procedures: Electroencephalogram (EEG), electromyography (EMG). during client suitability. The an internal audit finding suggests that a medical group under review for a credit facility has been inconsistently documenting diagnostic neurological tests. To ensure the accuracy of the physician-based coding for needle electromyography (EMG), which specific clinical documentation must be present in the patient’s medical record?
Correct
Correct: Needle EMG (CPT 95860-95870) requires the physician to insert a needle electrode into the muscle to record electrical activity; therefore, the documentation must specify the muscles tested and the findings related to motor unit potentials to support the code.
Incorrect
Correct: Needle EMG (CPT 95860-95870) requires the physician to insert a needle electrode into the muscle to record electrical activity; therefore, the documentation must specify the muscles tested and the findings related to motor unit potentials to support the code.
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Question 6 of 8
6. Question
The compliance framework at a mid-sized retail bank is being updated to address Digestive Diseases: GERD, peptic ulcer disease, inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis), cirrhosis, gallstones, pancreatitis. as part of a risk assessment for a new healthcare-sector lending portfolio. During a quality control review of medical records used for underwriting, an internal auditor identifies a case where a patient is diagnosed with a chronic inflammatory condition affecting the full thickness of the intestinal wall in a skip lesion pattern from the mouth to the anus. Which condition is most likely described by these clinical findings?
Correct
Correct: Crohn’s disease is a type of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that can affect any part of the gastrointestinal tract from the mouth to the anus. Its hallmark features include transmural inflammation (affecting the full thickness of the bowel wall) and skip lesions (discontinuous areas of inflammation with healthy tissue in between).
Incorrect
Correct: Crohn’s disease is a type of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that can affect any part of the gastrointestinal tract from the mouth to the anus. Its hallmark features include transmural inflammation (affecting the full thickness of the bowel wall) and skip lesions (discontinuous areas of inflammation with healthy tissue in between).
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Question 7 of 8
7. Question
Two proposed approaches to Hematologic Diseases: Anemia (various types), leukemia, lymphoma, hemophilia. conflict. Which approach is more appropriate, and why? A 62-year-old patient with a history of Follicular Lymphoma (Grade II) of the axillary and inguinal lymph nodes presents for a surveillance visit. The oncologist notes that the patient completed the R-CHOP regimen six months ago and currently has no evidence of active disease. The physician’s final assessment is “Follicular lymphoma, in remission.” One approach suggests using a personal history code (Z85.79) since treatment is complete, while the other suggests using the specific lymphoma code with the “in remission” designation.
Correct
Correct: According to ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting (Chapter 2: Neoplasms), for leukemia and lymphoma, the “in remission” codes (categories C81-C96) must be used when documented by the provider. Unlike solid tumors, which are coded as “personal history” (Z85.-) once treatment is complete and the tumor is removed or eradicated, hematologic malignancies have specific codes to capture the remission status within the malignancy chapters. Therefore, C82.90 is the most accurate code to reflect the physician’s documentation.
Incorrect: Option B is incorrect because it applies the logic for solid tumors (like breast or colon cancer) to hematologic malignancies, which is a violation of specific ICD-10-CM guidelines for lymphoid and hematopoietic tissues. Option C is incorrect because it ignores the physician’s specific documentation of “in remission,” which is a required clinical detail for accurate code selection in this category. Option D is incorrect because while Z08 might be used as a primary code for the encounter, the lymphoma itself must still be coded to provide the complete clinical picture, and the guideline specifically prohibits using a history code when a remission code is available.
Takeaway: For hematologic malignancies like lymphoma and leukemia, ICD-10-CM requires the use of specific “in remission” codes rather than “personal history” codes when documented by the provider.
Incorrect
Correct: According to ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting (Chapter 2: Neoplasms), for leukemia and lymphoma, the “in remission” codes (categories C81-C96) must be used when documented by the provider. Unlike solid tumors, which are coded as “personal history” (Z85.-) once treatment is complete and the tumor is removed or eradicated, hematologic malignancies have specific codes to capture the remission status within the malignancy chapters. Therefore, C82.90 is the most accurate code to reflect the physician’s documentation.
Incorrect: Option B is incorrect because it applies the logic for solid tumors (like breast or colon cancer) to hematologic malignancies, which is a violation of specific ICD-10-CM guidelines for lymphoid and hematopoietic tissues. Option C is incorrect because it ignores the physician’s specific documentation of “in remission,” which is a required clinical detail for accurate code selection in this category. Option D is incorrect because while Z08 might be used as a primary code for the encounter, the lymphoma itself must still be coded to provide the complete clinical picture, and the guideline specifically prohibits using a history code when a remission code is available.
Takeaway: For hematologic malignancies like lymphoma and leukemia, ICD-10-CM requires the use of specific “in remission” codes rather than “personal history” codes when documented by the provider.
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Question 8 of 8
8. Question
What factors should be weighed when choosing between alternatives for Psychiatric and Behavioral Disorders: Depression, anxiety disorders, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, substance use disorders.? A patient presents to a physician with a current episode of severe depression, including symptoms of lethargy and suicidal ideation. The physician’s comprehensive review of the patient’s medical history reveals a documented manic episode that occurred three years ago, characterized by decreased need for sleep and grandiosity. When selecting the most accurate ICD-10-CM code for this encounter, which factor is most critical for the coding specialist to evaluate?
Correct
Correct: In accordance with ICD-10-CM coding conventions and psychiatric diagnostic standards, a history of even a single manic or hypomanic episode precludes a diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder. The correct classification must be Bipolar Disorder (category F31), even if the patient is currently presenting with only depressive symptoms. This reflects the clinical understanding of the disorder’s cyclic nature.
Incorrect: Focusing only on the current severity of depression ignores the diagnostic hierarchy where a history of mania defines the disorder as Bipolar. Somatic symptoms are common in depression and do not automatically indicate an anxiety disorder. Medication adherence or ‘controlled’ status is not a primary axis for selecting the base ICD-10-CM code for these mood disorders.
Takeaway: A documented history of mania or hypomania requires the use of Bipolar Disorder codes for all subsequent mood-related encounters, regardless of the current episode’s polarity.
Incorrect
Correct: In accordance with ICD-10-CM coding conventions and psychiatric diagnostic standards, a history of even a single manic or hypomanic episode precludes a diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder. The correct classification must be Bipolar Disorder (category F31), even if the patient is currently presenting with only depressive symptoms. This reflects the clinical understanding of the disorder’s cyclic nature.
Incorrect: Focusing only on the current severity of depression ignores the diagnostic hierarchy where a history of mania defines the disorder as Bipolar. Somatic symptoms are common in depression and do not automatically indicate an anxiety disorder. Medication adherence or ‘controlled’ status is not a primary axis for selecting the base ICD-10-CM code for these mood disorders.
Takeaway: A documented history of mania or hypomania requires the use of Bipolar Disorder codes for all subsequent mood-related encounters, regardless of the current episode’s polarity.