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Atoms - Individual names (and associated metadata) that are synonymous with the concept’s underlying conceptual “meaning”.
In brackets is show the term type, the language, and any label related to where the synonym came from.
Term types of INDEX_SY reflect generated or manually added synonyms.
Atoms themselves may have attributes (or properties) which can be seen by expanding the “plus” icon next to each entry.
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Subsets - Shown in the report are the subsets that the focus concept is a member of. Conceptually, subsets are collections of concept codes from a terminology that are labeled and used for a specific use-case.
This examples shows the concept belonging to two anatomy related subsets.
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Maps - Organized into “sets”, these can be thought of as cross-terminology relationships. A way of linking codes in one terminology to codes in another.
This example shows a concept with a number of maps to ICD10CM.
The links can be clicked and will load the corresponding concept into the view.
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Relationships - (relationships from this concept).
Inverse Relationships are relationships to this concept from the indicated concept.
The
green “D” flags indicate that the relationship is part of the logical definition of the concept (e.g. part of the necessary and sufficient conditions)
The green
numbers indicate the SNOMEDCT “relationship group”
The next label is the high-level relationship type (mousing over it will provide more info). This corresponds to the UMLS REL field.
The longer label is the more detailed relationship type (e.g. “has_finding_site”). This corresponds to the UMLS RELA field.
The longer labels can be used in ECL queries in place of the concept ids for those relationships (this is particularly useful when using ECL with non-SNOMED terminologies).
Some concepts have large number of relationships - so remember clicking the header collapses the view to prevent the need for massive scrolling.
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