Acute nasopharyngitis [common cold]
- J00 is a billable/specific ICD-10-CM code that can be used to indicate a diagnosis for reimbursement purposes.
- The 2025 edition of ICD-10-CM J00 became effective on October 1, 2024.
- This is the American ICD-10-CM version of J00 – other international versions of ICD-10 J00 may differ.
Applicable To
- Acute rhinitis
- Coryza (acute)
- Infective nasopharyngitis NOS
- Infective rhinitis
- Nasal catarrh, acute
- Nasopharyngitis NOS
Type 1 Excludes
- acute pharyngitis (J02.-)
- acute sore throat NOS (J02.9)
- influenza virus with other respiratory manifestations (J09.X2, J10.1, J11.1)
- pharyngitis NOS (J02.9)
- rhinitis NOS (J31.0)
- sore throat NOS (J02.9)
Type 2 Excludes
- allergic rhinitis (J30.1-J30.9)
- chronic pharyngitis (J31.2)
- chronic rhinitis (J31.0)
- chronic sore throat (J31.2)
- nasopharyngitis, chronic (J31.1)
- vasomotor rhinitis (J30.0)
The following code(s) above J00 contain annotation back-references
that may be applicable to J00:
Approximate Synonyms
- Acute irritant rhinitis
- Common cold
- Infectious rhinitis
- Nasopharyngitis
- Rhinitis, infectious
Clinical Information
- A catarrhal disorder of the upper respiratory tract, which may be viral or a mixed infection. It generally involves a runny nose, nasal congestion, and sneezing.
- A disorder characterized by an infectious process involving the nasal mucosal.
- An inflammatory process affecting the nasal mucosa, usually caused by viruses (e.g., rhinovirus, adenovirus, parainfluenza virus, and coronavirus). It is characterized by chills, headaches, mucopurulent nasal discharge, coughing, and facial pain.
- Catarrhal disorder of the upper respiratory tract, which may be viral or a mixed infection; marked by acute coryza, slight rise in temperature, chilly sensations, and general indisposition.
- Inflammation of the nasopharynx, usually including its mucosa, related lymphoid structure, and glands.
- Sneezing, sore throat, a stuffy nose, coughing – everyone knows the symptoms of the common cold. It is probably the most common illness. In the course of a year, people in the United States suffer 1 billion colds.you can get a cold by touching your eyes or nose after you touch surfaces with cold germs on them. You can also inhale the germs. Symptoms usually begin 2 or 3 days after infection and last 2 to 14 days. Washing your hands and staying away from people with colds will help you avoid colds. There is no cure for the common cold. For relief, try
- getting plenty of rest
- drinking fluids
- gargling with warm salt water
- using cough drops or throat sprays
- taking over-the-counter pain or cold medicines
ICD-10-CM J00 is grouped within Diagnostic Related Group(s) (MS-DRG v42.0):
- 011 Tracheostomy for face, mouth and neck diagnoses or laryngectomy with mcc
- 012 Tracheostomy for face, mouth and neck diagnoses or laryngectomy with cc
- 013 Tracheostomy for face, mouth and neck diagnoses or laryngectomy without cc/mcc
- 152 Otitis media and uri with mcc
- 153 Otitis media and uri without mcc
Convert J00 to ICD-9-CMCode History
- 2016 (effective 10/1/2015): New code (first year of non-draft ICD-10-CM)
- 2017 (effective 10/1/2016): No change
- 2018 (effective 10/1/2017): No change
- 2019 (effective 10/1/2018): No change
- 2020 (effective 10/1/2019): No change
- 2021 (effective 10/1/2020): No change
- 2022 (effective 10/1/2021): No change
- 2023 (effective 10/1/2022): No change
- 2024 (effective 10/1/2023): No change
- 2025 (effective 10/1/2024): No change
Code annotations containing back-references to J00:
- Type 2 Excludes: J31.1
Diagnosis Index entries containing back-references to J00:
- Catarrh, catarrhal (acute) (febrile) (infectious) (inflammation) J00 – see also condition
- nasopharyngeal (chronic) J31.1
- acute J00
- nasopharyngeal (chronic) J31.1
- Cold J00
- common J00 (head)
- head J00
- symptoms J00
- virus J00
- Common
- cold J00 (head)
- Coryza (acute) J00
- Drip, postnasal (chronic) R09.82
- due to
- common cold J00
- due to
- Fever (inanition) (of unknown origin) (persistent) (with chills) (with rigor) R50.9
- catarrhal (acute) J00
- Infection, infected, infective (opportunistic) B99.9
- respiratory (tract) J98.8
- rhinovirus J00
- respiratory (tract) J98.8
- Inflammation, inflamed, inflammatory (with exudation)
- catarrhal J00
- Nasopharyngitis (acute) (infective) (streptococcal) (subacute) J00
- Postnasal dripR09.82
- due to
- common cold J00
- due to
- Rhinitis (atrophic) (catarrhal) (chronic) (croupous) (fibrinous) (granulomatous) (hyperplastic) (hypertrophic) (membranous) (obstructive) (purulent) (suppurative) (ulcerative) J31.0
- acute J00
- infective J00
- pneumococcal J00
- Symptoms NECR68.89
- cold J00
- viral cold J00