Billable / Specific Code
ICD-10-CM R68.0 is the diagnosis code for Hypothermia, not associated with low environmental temperature. This code falls under the section "General symptoms and signs" within Chapter 18 — Symptoms, signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings, not elsewhere classified (R00-R99). It is a billable/specific ICD-10-CM code that can be used to indicate a diagnosis for reimbursement purposes. Medical coders and healthcare providers use this code to document and classify diagnoses in electronic health records, insurance claims, and clinical databases.
The following conditions should never be coded at the same time as R68.0. They are mutually exclusive:
Understanding where R68.0 sits in the ICD-10-CM classification helps ensure proper coding:
Yes, R68.0 is a billable/specific ICD-10-CM code that can be used to indicate a diagnosis for reimbursement purposes.
R68.0 is the ICD-10-CM diagnosis code for "Hypothermia, not associated with low environmental temperature". It is used by healthcare providers to classify and document this condition in medical records and insurance claims.
The parent code of R68.0 is R68 ("Other general symptoms and signs"). R68.0 provides a more specific classification within this category.
R68.0 is located in Section R50-R69 — "General symptoms and signs" within Chapter 18 of the ICD-10-CM Tabular List.
Use R68.0 when the patients documented diagnosis matches "Hypothermia, not associated with low environmental temperature" and the clinical documentation supports this level of specificity. Always verify with the latest ICD-10-CM guidelines and payer requirements.
The ICD-10-CM code for Hypothermia, not associated with low environmental temperature is R68.0.
Yes, R68.0 can be used as a primary diagnosis code since it is billable and specific.
R68.0 is in Chapter 18 of the ICD-10-CM Tabular List.
Type 1 Excludes for R68.0 include: hypothermia NOS (accidental) (T68); hypothermia due to anesthesia (T88.51); hypothermia due to low environmental temperature (T68) and more.
Yes, R68.0 is a valid ICD-10-CM code for the 2026 fiscal year, subject to official CMS updates.