R35.1
BillableNocturia
Nocturia
Coding Notes
Excludes 1
Codes that cannot be used together with this code (mutual exclusion)
- psychogenic polyuria (F45.8)
Excludes 2
Conditions not included here, but the patient may have both
Code First
The underlying condition must be sequenced before this code
- , if applicable, any causal condition, such as:
- enlarged prostate (N40.1)
Also Known As / Clinical Terms
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the ICD-10 code for nocturia?
The ICD-10-CM code for nocturia is R35.1. The full clinical description is "Nocturia". R35.1 is a billable/specific code that can be used on insurance claims and medical billing.
What does ICD-10 code R35.1 mean?
ICD-10-CM code R35.1 represents "Nocturia". It is classified under Chapter 18: Symptoms, Signs and Abnormal Clinical and Laboratory Findings and is a billable/specific code that can be used on a claim.
Is R35.1 a billable code?
Yes, R35.1 is a billable/specific ICD-10-CM code and can be used to indicate a diagnosis on a medical claim.
What chapter is R35.1 in?
R35.1 is in Chapter 18: Symptoms, Signs and Abnormal Clinical and Laboratory Findings (codes R00-R99).
What codes cannot be used with R35.1?
R35.1 has Excludes1 notes indicating codes that cannot be used together with it, including: psychogenic polyuria (F45.8).
What SNOMED CT codes does R35.1 map to?
R35.1 maps to 2 SNOMED CT concepts: 139394000, 1711000119101. SNOMED CT is a clinical terminology used in electronic health records.
What are the UMLS CUIs for R35.1?
R35.1 is linked to 1 UMLS Concept Unique Identifier: C0028734. The UMLS (Unified Medical Language System) integrates multiple biomedical vocabularies maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
Automate ICD-10 Coding With AI
Send clinical text to the AutoICD API and get back structured ICD-10 codes with confidence scores. Integrates into any EHR or billing system in minutes.
Includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) used by permission of SNOMED International. Includes content from the UMLS Metathesaurus, courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.