| Literature DB >> 29600497 |
Abstract
ICD-11 (International Classification of Diseases, 11th Revision) is the next major revision of the ICD by the World Health Organization (WHO). ICD-11 differs dramatically from historical versions, as it is based on an underlying semantic network of terms and meaning, called the Foundation. To function as a mutually exclusive and exhaustive statistical classification, ICD-11 creates derivative linearizations from the network that is a monohierarchy with residual categories such as Not Elsewhere Classified. ICD-11 also introduces the widespread post-coordination of terms, which allows for highly expressive representation of detailed patient descriptions. Phenotyping features are included in many subchapters or the signs and symptoms chapter. Composite phenotype descriptions of specific presentations or syndromes can be represented though post-coordination. Rare diseases are well represented in the Foundation, though not all appear in the relatively shallow linearization hierarchies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29600497 PMCID: PMC5959961 DOI: 10.1007/s10545-018-0172-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inherit Metab Dis ISSN: 0141-8955 Impact factor: 4.982
Fig. 1Zellweger syndrome is shown in the context of the Mortality and Morbidity Statistics (MMS) linearization, where it is below the shoreline and has no rubric codes. It is included only as an index entry
Fig. 2The same Zellweger syndrome appearing in the full Foundation component with its own identifier and descriptions. This entry has six parents, illustrating the polyhierarchy nature of the Foundation semantic network