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neovascularization

Wikipedia Summary

Neovascularization is the natural formation of new blood vessels (neo- + vascular + -ization), usually in the form of functional microvascular networks, capable of perfusion by red blood cells, that form to serve as collateral circulation in response to local poor perfusion or ischemia. Growth factors that inhibit neovascularization include those that affect endothelial cell division and differentiation. These growth factors often act in a paracrine or autocrine fashion; they include fibroblast growth factor, placental growth factor, insulin-like growth factor, hepatocyte growth factor, and platelet-derived endothelial growth factor. There are three different pathways that comprise neovascularization: (1) vasculogenesis, (2) angiogenesis, and (3) arteriogenesis..
Related Codes (5)
Code
Description
Billable
Details
H26.21Cataract with neovascularization
H26.211Cataract with neovascularization, right eye
H26.212Cataract with neovascularization, left eye
H26.213Cataract with neovascularization, bilateral
H26.219Cataract with neovascularization, unspecified eye

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