A00-B99 C00-D48D50-D89 E00-E90 F00-F99 G00-G99 H00-H59 H60-H95 I00-I99 J00-J99 K00-K93
L00-L99 M00-M99 N00-N99 O00-O99 P00-P96 Q00-Q99 R00-R99 S00-T98 V01-Y98 Z00-Z99 U00-U99

F10-F19 Mental and behavioural disorders due to psychoactive substance use




 
Chapter V

Mental and behavioural disorders
(F00-F99)

Mental and behavioural disorders due to psychoactive substance use
(F10-F19)

This block contains a wide variety of disorders that differ in severity and clinical form but that are all attributable to the use of one or more psychoactive substances, which may or may not have been medically prescribed. The third character of the code identifies the substance involved, and the fourth character specifies the clinical state. The codes should be used, as required, for each substance specified, but it should be noted that not all fourth character codes are applicable to all substances.

Identification of the psychoactive substance should be based on as many sources of information as possible. These include self-report data, analysis of blood and other body fluids, characteristic physical and psychological symptoms, clinical signs and behaviour, and other evidence such as a drug being in the patient's possession or reports from informed third parties. Many drug users take more than one type of psychoactive substance. The main diagnosis should be classified, whenever possible, according to the substance or class of substances that has caused or contributed most to the presenting clinical syndrome. Other diagnoses should be coded when other psychoactive substances have been taken in intoxicating amounts (common fourth character .0) or to the extent of causing harm (common fourth character .1), dependence (common fourth character .2) or other disorders (common fourth character .3-.9).

Only in cases in which patterns of psychoactive substance-taking are chaotic and indiscriminate, or in which the contributions of different psychoactive substances are inextricably mixed, should the diagnosis of disorders resulting from multiple drug use (F19.-) be used.
The following fourth-character subdivisions are for use with categories F10-F19:
.0Acute intoxication
A condition that follows the administration of a psychoactive substance resulting in disturbances in level of consciousness, cognition, perception, affect or behaviour, or other psycho-physiological functions and responses. The disturbances are directly related to the acute pharmacological effects of the substance and resolve with time, with complete recovery, except where tissue damage or other complications have arisen. Complications may include trauma, inhalation of vomitus, delirium, coma, convulsions, and other medical complications. The nature of these complications depends on the pharmacological class of substance and mode of administration.
Acute drunkenness in alcoholism
"Bad trips" (drugs)
Drunkenness NOS
Pathological intoxication
Trance and possession disorders in psychoactive substance intoxication
Excludes:intoxication meaning poisoning (T36-T50)
.1Harmful use
A pattern of psychoactive substance use that is causing damage to health. The damage may be physical (as in cases of hepatitis from the self-administration of injected psychoactive substances) or mental (e.g. episodes of depressive disorder secondary to heavy consumption of alcohol).
Psychoactive substance abuse
.2Dependence syndrome
A cluster of behavioural, cognitive, and physiological phenomena that develop after repeated substance use and that typically include a strong desire to take the drug, difficulties in controlling its use, persisting in its use despite harmful consequences, a higher priority given to drug use than to other activities and obligations, increased tolerance, and sometimes a physical withdrawal state.

The dependence syndrome may be present for a specific psychoactive substance (e.g. tobacco, alcohol, or diazepam), for a class of substances (e.g. opioid drugs), or for a wider range of pharmacologically different psychoactive substances.

Chronic alcoholism
Dipsomania
Drug addiction
.3Withdrawal state
A group of symptoms of variable clustering and severity occurring on absolute or relative withdrawal of a psychoactive substance after persistent use of that substance. The onset and course of the withdrawal state are time-limited and are related to the type of psychoactive substance and dose being used immediately before cessation or reduction of use. The withdrawal state may be complicated by convulsions.
.4Withdrawal state with delirium
A condition where the withdrawal state as defined in the common fourth character .3 is complicated by delirium as defined in F05.-. Convulsions may also occur. When organic factors are also considered to play a role in the etiology, the condition should be classified to F05.8.
Delirium tremens (alcohol-induced)
.5Psychotic disorder
A cluster of psychotic phenomena that occur during or following psychoactive substance use but that are not explained on the basis of acute intoxication alone and do not form part of a withdrawal state. The disorder is characterized by hallucinations (typically auditory, but often in more than one sensory modality), perceptual distortions, delusions (often of a paranoid or persecutory nature), psychomotor disturbances (excitement or stupor), and an abnormal affect, which may range from intense fear to ecstasy. The sensorium is usually clear but some degree of clouding of consciousness, though not severe confusion, may be present.
Alcoholic:
· hallucinosis
· jealousy
· paranoia
· psychosis NOS
Excludes:alcohol- or other psychoactive substance-induced residual and late-onset psychotic disorder (F10-F19 with common fourth character .7)
.6Amnesic syndrome
A syndrome associated with chronic prominent impairment of recent and remote memory. Immediate recall is usually preserved and recent memory is characteristically more disturbed than remote memory. Disturbances of time sense and ordering of events are usually evident, as are difficulties in learning new material. Confabulation may be marked but is not invariably present. Other cognitive functions are usually relatively well preserved and amnesic defects are out of proportion to other disturbances.
Amnestic disorder, alcohol- or drug-induced
Korsakov's psychosis or syndrome, alcohol- or other psychoactive substance-induced or unspecified
Excludes:nonalcoholic Korsakov's psychosis or syndrome (F04)
.7Residual and late-onset psychotic disorder
A disorder in which alcohol- or psychoactive substance-induced changes of cognition, affect, personality, or behaviour persist beyond the period during which a direct psychoactive substance-related effect might reasonably be assumed to be operating. Onset of the disorder should be directly related to the use of the psychoactive substance. Cases in which initial onset of the state occurs later than episode(s) of such substance use should be coded here only where clear and strong evidence is available to attribute the state to the residual effect of the psychoactive substance. Flashbacks may be distinguished from psychotic state partly by their episodic nature, frequently of very short duration, and by their duplication of previous alcohol- or other psychoactive substance-related experiences.
Alcoholic dementia NOS
Chronic alcoholic brain syndrome
Dementia and other milder forms of persisting impairment of cognitive functions
Flashbacks
Late-onset psychoactive substance-induced psychotic disorder
Posthallucinogen perception disorder
Residual:
· affective disorder
· disorder of personality and behaviour
Excludes:alcohol- or psychoactive substance-induced:
· Korsakov's syndrome (F10-F19 with common fourth character .6)
· psychotic state (F10-F19 with common fourth character .5)
.8Other mental and behavioural disorders
.9Unspecified mental and behavioural disorder

F10Mental and behavioural disorders due to use of alcohol
Latin: Disordines mentales et disordines morum propter usum alcholis (alcoholismus)
[See before F10 for subdivisions]

F11Mental and behavioural disorders due to use of opioids
Latin: Disordines mentales et disordines morum propter usum opiatorum (opiatomania)
[See before F10 for subdivisions]

F12Mental and behavioural disorders due to use of cannabinoids
Latin: Disordines mentales et disordines morum propter usum cannabinoidarum (canabinomania)
[See before F10 for subdivisions]

F13Mental and behavioural disorders due to use of sedatives or hypnotics
Latin: Disordines mentales et disordines morum propter usum hypnoticorum sive sedativorum (hypnoticomania)
[See before F10 for subdivisions]

F14Mental and behavioural disorders due to use of cocaine
Latin: Disordines mentales et disordines morum propter usum cocaini (cocainomania)
[See before F10 for subdivisions]

F15Mental and behavioural disorders due to use of other stimulants, including caffeine
Latin: Disordines mentales et disordines morum propter usum stimulantium aliorum, coffeinum includens (coffeinomania)
[See before F10 for subdivisions]

F16Mental and behavioural disorders due to use of hallucinogens
Latin: Disordines mentales et disordines morum propter usum hallucinogenium (hallucinomania)
[See before F10 for subdivisions]

F17Mental and behavioural disorders due to use of tobacco
Latin: Disordines mentales et disordines morum propter usum tabaci (tabaccomania)
[See before F10 for subdivisions]

F18Mental and behavioural disorders due to use of volatile solvents
Latin: Disordines mentales et disordines morum propter usum solutionum volatilium (solventomania)
[See before F10 for subdivisions]

F19Mental and behavioural disorders due to multiple drug use and use of other psychoactive substances
Latin: Disordines mentales et disordines morum propter usum substantiarum psychoactivarum multiplicium et aliarum
[See before F10 for subdivisions]
This category should be used when two or more psychoactive substances are known to be involved, but it is impossible to assess which substance is contributing most to the disorders. It should also be used when the exact identity of some or even all the psychoactive substances being used is uncertain or unknown, since many multiple drug users themselves often do not know the details of what they are taking.
Includes:misuse of drugs NOS


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