ICD-10-CM · General

M10.00

M10.00 identifies idiopathic (primary) gout without a documented anatomic site — no laterality, no specific joint named in the record.

Verified May 8, 2026 · 6 sources ↓

Status
Billable
Chapter
13
Related CPT
10
Region
General
Drawn from CDCICD10DataAAPCPrecisionhubIcdcodes

Documentation tips

What should appear in the chart to support M10.00.

Source · Editorial brief grounded in 6 cited references ↓

  • Record the specific joint involved by name (e.g., first MTP, right knee, left wrist) — this alone moves you off M10.00 to a billable site-specific code.
  • Document whether the presentation is an acute flare versus chronic/tophaceous gout; flare maps to M10.0x, chronic tophi map to M1A.-.
  • If synovial fluid analysis was performed, note the MSU crystal result — it supports the idiopathic classification and strengthens audit defense.
  • Specify laterality explicitly (right, left, or bilateral) whenever a joint is named; unspecified laterality is a separate audit risk on top of unspecified site.
  • When gout coexists with CKD or is drug-induced, document the causal relationship clearly so the correct secondary-gout subcategory (M10.1–M10.4) can be assigned instead of M10.00.

Related CPT procedures

Procedure codes commonly billed with M10.00. Linking the right diagnosis to the right procedure is what establishes medical necessity.

Source · CMS LCDs · AAOS specialty guidance · claims-pattern analysis

Common coding pitfalls

The recurring mistakes coders make with M10.00 and adjacent codes.

Source · Editorial brief grounded in CDC ICD-10-CM tabular guidance, AAOS coding references, and cited references ↓

  • Using M10.00 when the joint is documented in the note — always scan the full encounter for site documentation before defaulting to unspecified.
  • Confusing M10.00 (idiopathic, unspecified site) with M10.9 (gout, unspecified type and site) — M10.9 is for unknown gout type; M10.00 is for known idiopathic gout with unknown site.
  • Applying M10.00 to chronic gout or tophaceous gout — those belong under M1A.- regardless of whether the site is specified.
  • Failing to check for a secondary cause (CKD, diuretics, lead exposure) before assigning idiopathic gout; misclassifying secondary gout as idiopathic creates audit exposure.
  • Not adding secondary codes for gout-related manifestations (e.g., G99.0 autonomic neuropathy, N08 glomerular disorders) when documented — the M10 category instructs 'use additional code' for these conditions.

Clinical context

Source · Editorial summary grounded in 6 cited references ↓

Use M10.00 only when the provider documents gout as idiopathic or primary and the affected joint is not specified anywhere in the encounter documentation. This is the fallback within the M10.0x subcategory — not a first-choice code. If the joint is named, you must drop to a site-specific code: M10.071–M10.079 for ankle/foot, M10.061–M10.069 for knee, M10.041–M10.049 for hand, and so on. Site-specific codes require a 6th character for laterality (1 = right, 2 = left, 9 = unspecified side).

M10.00 covers acute gout flares, gout attacks, gouty bursitis, and podagra when the site is genuinely undocumented — not when the coder simply skips reading the note. If the gout is chronic or involves tophi, redirect to the M1A.- category instead. Secondary gout (drug-induced, lead-induced, renal impairment) belongs in M10.1–M10.4, not M10.0x.

From a DRG perspective, M10.00 groups to MS-DRG 553 (Bone Diseases and Arthropathies with MCC) or 554 (without MCC) under MS-DRG v43.0. Payers may query unspecified-site gout claims, so expect medical necessity documentation requests when this code appears without supporting notes explaining why site is unknown.

Sibling codes

Other billable codes under M10.0 (laterality / anatomic variants).

Frequently asked questions

Source · Generated from the editorial pipeline, verified against 6 cited references ↓

01When is M10.00 the correct code versus M10.9?
Use M10.00 when gout is confirmed as idiopathic (primary) but no joint site is documented. Use M10.9 when neither the gout type nor the site is specified. If you know it's idiopathic, M10.00 is more specific than M10.9.
02Can I use M10.00 for a podagra (great toe) flare if the provider just writes 'gout'?
No. Podagra implies the first metatarsophalangeal joint. Query the provider or check the physical exam for laterality, then code M10.071 (right) or M10.072 (left). M10.00 is only appropriate when the site is genuinely absent from the entire record.
03Does M10.00 require a 7th character?
No. M-codes in the gout category do not use 7th-character extensions. The 7th-character A/D/S convention applies to injury S-codes, not to M10.xx.
04How do I code gout when the patient has both an acute flare and chronic tophaceous gout at the same visit?
Code both: the acute flare from M10.0x for the specific joint and the chronic tophaceous condition from M1A.-. The ICD-10-CM tabular excludes chronic gout from M10 with a Type 2 Excludes note, meaning both can be reported together when both are present.
05If gout is documented as 'gouty arthritis' without further detail, which code applies?
Gouty arthritis is listed as an approximate synonym for M10.0 (idiopathic gout). If no site is documented, M10.00 applies. If a joint is named, move to the appropriate site-specific M10.0x code.
06Should I report additional codes alongside M10.00?
Yes, when documented. The M10 category instructs coders to use additional codes for autonomic neuropathy (G99.0), urinary calculi (N22), cardiomyopathy (I43), glomerular disorders (N08), and ear or eye disorders when gout is the underlying disease.
07Is M10.00 valid for inpatient and outpatient claims?
It is billable in both settings. Inpatient claims group to MS-DRG 553 or 554 depending on MCC presence. Outpatient payers may flag unspecified-site codes for additional documentation, so site-specific coding is always preferable when supportable.

Mira AI Scribe

The Mira AI Scribe captures the affected joint by name and side, the flare versus chronic status, MSU crystal confirmation from synovial fluid or DECT, and any comorbid renal or medication triggers — pulling all of this from the provider's note automatically. That specificity pushes the code from M10.00 to a site-and-laterality-precise M10.0x, eliminating the unspecified-site audit flag and preventing payer downcoding or medical necessity queries.

See how Mira captures M10.00 documentation

Related ICD-10 codes

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