Aetna · Rhode Island
Denied on Injection of nerves of the sacroiliac joint in Rhode Island by Aetna?The denial, the code, and the path to recovery.
Aetna paid your out of network Injection of nerves of the sacroiliac joint in Rhode Island below the billed charge, or denied it outright. That gap is what federal independent dispute resolution exists to recover, and we prepare the submission for you.
CPT 64451 covers injection of the nerves that supply the sacroiliac joint with imaging.
Why claims like this get denied.
Out of network Injection of nerves of the sacroiliac joint claims in Rhode Island are commonly underpaid or denied for reasons like these.
Denied as not medically necessary
The claim was denied as not medically necessary, common on interventional pain procedures where the payer second guesses the indication.
Downcoded to a lower level
The payer paid a lower level code than the one billed for Injection of nerves of the sacroiliac joint.
Frequency or level limit applied
A frequency or level limit was applied to the injection series, denying covered levels.
Anchored to the qualifying payment amount
The payer priced the claim off the qualifying payment amount, which often sits well below the real market rate for Injection of nerves of the sacroiliac joint.
Modifier or documentation gap
A modifier or documentation gap let the payer downcode or deny rather than pay the level billed.
We do this for you.
When an out of network surgical claim is filed right, federal IDR routinely pays well above the insurer's first number, and most properly filed disputes go the provider's way. We build the submission, your billing team approves it, and you keep the recovery. We do this every day and we win most of the time. No one can promise a specific result on a specific claim, and we will not pretend otherwise.
No outcome is guaranteed. Results vary by claim, payer, specialty, and documentation. Any general figures reflect the published federal record across all disputes, not a prediction about your claim. This is general information, not legal or financial advice.
The window does not wait.
Most practices never file, and the window does not wait. After open negotiation ends you have four business days to start a dispute. Miss it and that money is gone for good. This is the part that costs surgical practices the most, doing nothing.
The pathway in Rhode Island.
In Rhode Island, the pathway for out of network surgical disputes is federal independent dispute resolution. Self funded ERISA plans follow the federal IDR process. Confirm fully insured routing against the CMS applicability chart before filing.
Send us this denial.
Send us this denial. We will tell you fast whether it qualifies and, if it does, we build the submission.
Common questions.
Was your Injection of nerves of the sacroiliac joint claim underpaid by Aetna in Rhode Island?
If Aetna paid your out of network Injection of nerves of the sacroiliac joint in Rhode Island below the billed charge, that gap is what federal IDR exists to recover. Send us the denial and we will tell you fast whether it qualifies.
Does federal IDR apply to Injection of nerves of the sacroiliac joint in Rhode Island?
In Rhode Island, out of network surgical disputes route through federal independent dispute resolution. Self funded ERISA plans follow the federal IDR process. Confirm fully insured routing against the CMS applicability chart before filing.
How does Sydra dispute a Aetna denial on Injection of nerves of the sacroiliac joint?
We build the federal IDR submission, your billing team approves it, and you keep the recovery. We do this every day and we win most of the time. No outcome is guaranteed, and we will not predict a result on a specific claim.