Nephritis, chronic — VA Rating Criteria (38 CFR DC 7502)
The VA rates Nephritis, chronic under 38 CFR 38 CFR § 4.115b, Diagnostic Code 7502, from 0% to 0% based on the frequency and functional severity of symptoms. The maximum 0% rating requires Rate as renal dysfunction.. Related conditions in the Genitourinary body system share this rating framework.
What are the VA rating criteria for Nephritis, chronic?
Rate as renal dysfunction.
“Rate as renal dysfunction.”
How does the VA rate Genitourinary conditions?
Common Questions About Nephritis, chronic VA Ratings
What is the VA disability rating for Nephritis, chronic?
The VA rates Nephritis, chronic under Diagnostic Code 7502 at the following tiers: 0%. The minimum 0% rating requires: Rate as renal dysfunction.. The maximum 0% rating requires: Rate as renal dysfunction..
What is Diagnostic Code 7502?
Diagnostic Code 7502 is the VA rating identifier for Nephritis, chronic within 38 CFR 38 CFR § 4.115b. It defines the specific symptom criteria and percentage thresholds a VA adjudicator uses to assign a disability rating. The diagnostic code is listed on a veteran's rating decision letter.
What is the highest rating for Nephritis, chronic?
The maximum rating for Nephritis, chronic is defined in 38 CFR Part 4 under DC 7502. See the rating tiers above for exact criteria.
What 38 CFR section governs Nephritis, chronic ratings?
Nephritis, chronic is rated under 38 CFR 38 CFR § 4.115b, Diagnostic Code 7502. This section is part of the Schedule for Rating Disabilities (38 CFR Part 4) and can be read in full at the eCFR website.
Which conditions are commonly secondary to Nephritis, chronic?
Secondary conditions caused or aggravated by Nephritis, chronic may be ratable under 38 CFR § 3.310. Veterans should work with a VSO or accredited claims agent to document the medical relationship.
What evidence do I need to establish service connection for Nephritis, chronic?
Service connection for Nephritis, chronic requires three elements: (1) a current diagnosis of the condition, (2) an in-service event, injury, or disease that may have caused or aggravated it, and (3) a medical nexus connecting the current diagnosis to that in-service event. A nexus letter from a treating physician or independent medical examiner is the most reliable nexus evidence. C&P exam findings can also establish nexus if adequately documented.
Get a Personalized Rating Analysis
VeteranHQ evaluates your symptoms against the exact 38 CFR criteria, identifies secondary conditions, and shows what evidence you need to support a higher rating.
Discover Your Benefits