Coders should not code adhesions and lysis thereof, based solely on mention of adhesions or lysis in an operative report. As is customary with other surgeries
Enterolysis (freeing of intestinal adhesion). . Ureterolysis Laparoscopy, surgical; with lysis of adhesions (salpingolysis, ovariolysis) (separate).
FMwand: Lysis of Adhesions and Liver Resection. Lysis of abdominal adhesions and liver resection using the FMwand. Procedure was performed and narrated by Dr.
Lysis of preputial adhesions. Surgical lysis of preputial adhesions is indicated when natural processes – smegma accumulation and suppuration, spontaneous
Epidural lysis of adhesions Epidural lysis of adhesions (LOA), also known as percutaneous adhesiolysis or the Racz procedure, is a minimally invasive spine
Lysis of adhesions is a surgical procedure that involves the removal of scar tissue or adhesions that have formed in the body.
Watch Dr. Tory McJunkin perform an Epidural Lysis of Adhesions Procedure - Live Adhesiolysis or Epidural Lysis of Adhesions is also known
Some will require surgery for lysis of adhesions. Adhesions may cause abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and bowel obstruction.
Code , Laparoscopy, surgical; with lysis of adhesions (salpingolysis, ovariolysis) (separate procedure), can be reported in addition to the primary procedure, only if dense/extensive adhesions are encountered that require effort beyond that ordinarily provided for the laparoscopic procedure. Lysis of adhesions typically is included as part
Comments
I will do Anon too, for the following reason:
Your statement about Boyd's undescended testicles is medically incorrect. This I know from personal experience, as I had the surgery when I was 10 to 'fix' one of mine. My son had the preventative surgery before his second birthday. Problem is caused by adhesions on the vas deferens that as the body grows they literally pull the testes back into the body. This also can cause inguinal hernias in the process. Always correctable, and preventable if you know to check.
Seriously, how can you know so much about almost everything? I'm also in the med school, and this is the first time I am seeing someone mentioning tumor lysis syndrome, and a pretty accurate description of scleroderma in their fiction. From the level of detailing, I'm guessing you are an engineer/physics major with an interest in medicine or probably of those biophysics guys. Anyways, the amount of background research you've done, cudos man!!
The fiction and the quality of the writing is great too. Though I think the romantic conversation became a bit repetitive after a while. Also, the ending seemed a little forced, like the characters went out of your hand and started living their own life, and you wanted to finish this already massive(in a literotica standard) work of fiction. My advice is, get a good editor, touch up this work a little, and publish in amazon before someone else does. Wish you a great future ahead.