J67.6 Maple-bark-stripper's lung

✓ Billable ICD-10-CM 2026
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The ICD-10-CM code for Maple-bark-stripper's lung is J67.6 (FY2026). It is a billable, claim-ready diagnosis code.

Classification

Section
J60-J70: Lung diseases due to external agents (J60-J70)
Category J67
11 codes (10 billable)
FY2026 Status
Stable since FY2024

Also Known As

ICD-10-CM Alphabetic Index entries that lead to J67.6:

  • Cryptostromosis
  • Maple-bark-stripper's lung (disease)
  • Disease, diseased › maple bark
  • Alveolitis › due to › Cryptostroma corticale
  • Pneumonitis (acute) (primary) › hypersensitivity › maple bark-stripper's lung
  • Allergy, allergic (reaction) (to) › alveolitis (extrinsic) › due to › Cryptostroma corticale

Inclusion Terms

  • Alveolitis due to Cryptostroma corticale
  • Cryptostromosis

U.S. Hospital Utilization

J67.6 appeared in too few sampled U.S. inpatient stays in 2018 to report a national estimate (AHRQ suppresses counts of 10 or fewer) — a rare inpatient 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

COPD/asthma: acute exacerbation vs uncomplicated

a. Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease [COPD] and Asthma 1) Acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive bronchitis and asthma The codes in categories J44 and J45 distinguish between uncomplicated cases and those in acute exacerbation. An acute exacerbation is a worsening or a decompensation of a chronic condition. An acute exacerbation is not equivalent to an infection superimposed on a chronic condition, though an exacerbation may be triggered by an infection.

— ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting, FY2026, Section I.C.10.a.1
Acute respiratory failure as principal diagnosis

b. Acute Respiratory Failure 1) Acute respiratory failure as principal diagnosis A code from subcategory J96.0, Acute respiratory failure, or subcategory J96.2, Acute and chronic respiratory failure, may be assigned as a principal diagnosis when it is the condition established after study to be chiefly responsible for occasioning the admission to the hospital, and the selection is supported by the Alphabetic Index and Tabular List. However, chapter- specific coding guidelines (such as obstetrics, poisoning, HIV, newborn) that provide sequencing direction take precedence.

— ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting, FY2026, Section I.C.10.b.1

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

References

Related Codes

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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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