Allergy Testing
Allergies result from an overreaction of the immune system to foreign substances. An allergy develops when the body is exposed to a substance that prompts the initiation of an immune response. This response involves the production of antibodies, called immunoglobulins (Igs), which are directed against proteins of the foreign substance, called allergens or antigens. While there are five classes of immunoglobulins, it is IgE that is typically involved in allergic reactions. When an allergy-prone individual is exposed to a specific antigen, B-cells producean IgE that recognizes only that antigen. This antigen-specific IgE then binds to receptors on specific cells that reside in tissue (mast cells) or circulate in the blood (basophils). Upon re-exposure to the same antigen, the antigen-specific IgE binds to membrane receptors on tissue mast cells and blood basophils and then releases a series of chemicals (histamine, leukotrienes, cytokines and proteases) that regulate the allergic reaction. While the allergic reaction begins immediately, signs and symptoms of the reaction may occur within seconds or minutes (immediate hypersensitivity), may be delayed for several hours (delayed hypersensitivity), or may involve both early- and late-phase reactions.
Allergy tests are performed to verify or exclude the presence of IgE-mediated hypersensitivity and to identify the causative allergen(s). Testing may involve in vivo procedures, which determine the presence of specific IgE by administering an IgE-specific allergen into, on or near the patient and monitoring the patient’s physiological response(s). Allergy tests may also be in vitro procedures that determine the presence of specific IgE or elevated total IgE by analyzing patient serum.
The allergy testing methods and recommendations detailed below are based primarily on practice parameters and recommendations from the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology (AAAAI) and the American Academy of Otolaryngic Allergy (AAOA).
Medicare Payments, Reimbursement, Billing Guidelines, Fees Schedules , Eligibility, Deductibles, Allowable, Procedure Codes , Phone Number, Denial, Address, Medicare Appeal, EOB, ICD, Appeal.
Medicare Guideline posts
- Home
- Finding Medicare fee schedule - HOw to Guide
- LCD and procedure to diagnosis lookup - How to Gui...
- Medicare Fee Schedule, Payment and Reimbursement Benefit Guideline,
- Step by step Guide Medicare participation program
- Medicare Fee for Office Visit CPT Codes - CPT Code 99213, 99214, 99203
- Medicare revalidation process - how often provide need to do - FAQ
- Gastroenterology, Colonoscopy, Endoscopy Medicare CPT Code Fee
- Medicare claim address, phone numbers, payor id - revised list
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Top Medicare billing tips
-
CPT CODES and Description 81000 Urinalysis, by dip stick or tablet reagent for bilirubin, glucose, hemoglobin, ketones, leukocytes, nitr...
-
Patient Discharge Status Code - Definition A patient discharge status code is a two-digit code that identifies where the patient is at th...
-
99231 : Inpatient hospital visits: Initial and subsequent subsequent hospital care, per day, for the evaluation and management of a pat...
-
Procedure code and description 11400- Excision, benign lesion, except skin tag (unless listed elsewhere), trunk, arms or legs; lesion d...
-
CPT CODE and description 99243 - Office consultation for a new or established patient, which requires these 3 key components: A detailed h...
-
Procedure Codes 93975 Duplex scan of arterial inflow and venous outflow of abdominal, pelvic, scrotal contents and/or retroperitoneal org...
-
Procedure code and Description CPT 87635 - Infectious agent detection by nucleic acid (DNA or RNA); severe acute respiratory syndrome coro...
-
CPT CODE and description 87880 - Infectious agent antigen detection by immunoassay with direct optical observation; Streptococcus, group A...
-
CPT CODE and Description • 99401 – preventive medicine counseling and/or risk factor intervention/s provided to an individual (separate pro...
-
CPT code and description 63047 - Laminectomy, facetectomy and foraminotomy (unilateral or bilateral with decompression of spinal cord, cau...
No comments:
Post a Comment