E87.3 Alkalosis

✓ Billable ICD-10-CM 2026
Open E87.3 in Web App →

The ICD-10-CM code for Alkalosis is E87.3 (FY2026). It is a billable, claim-ready diagnosis code.

Classification

Section
E70-E88: Metabolic disorders (E70-E88)
Category E87
17 codes (14 billable)
FY2026 Status
Stable since FY2024

Also Known As

ICD-10-CM Alphabetic Index entries that lead to E87.3:

  • Alkalosis
  • Alkalemia
  • Acapnia
  • Alkalosis › metabolic
  • Alkalosis › respiratory
  • Tetany (due to) › alkalosis
  • Disorder (of) › electrolyte (balance) NEC › alkalosis (metabolic) (respiratory)

Inclusion Terms

  • Alkalosis NOS
  • Metabolic alkalosis
  • Respiratory alkalosis

U.S. Hospital Utilization

  • An estimated 274,600 U.S. inpatient stays in 2023 included E87.3 among the documented diagnoses.
  • 385 stays listed it as the principal diagnosis.

Source: National Inpatient Sample (NIS), Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP), Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2016–2023. National survey-weighted estimates.

Official Coding Guidelines

Diabetes mellitus (TOC entry)

a. Diabetes mellitus ................................................................................................................... 39

— ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting, FY2026, Section I.C.4.a
Obesity (TOC entry)

b. Obesity .................................................................................................................................. 42

— ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting, FY2026, Section I.C.4.b

Source: CMS — ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting, FY2026

References

Related Codes

Search all 70,000+ ICD-10-CM codes →
Reviewed by Prajwal Shrestha, CPC, CRC
Certified Professional Coder (CPC) and Certified Risk Adjustment Coder (CRC) · AAPC Member ID 01997614 · About · Editorial policy · Content last reviewed: 2025-10-01

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