All individuals in ICD10
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Delirium superimposed on dementia | F05.1 | |
| Delirium, not induced by alcohol and other psychoactive substances | F05 | [An etiologically nonspecific organic cerebral syndrome characterized by concurrent disturbances of consciousness and attention, perception, thinking, memory, psychomotor behaviour, emotion, and the sleep-wake schedule. The duration is variable and the degree of severity ranges from mild to very severe.] |
| Delirium, unspecified | F05.9 | |
| Delivery | O80-O84.9 | |
| Delivery by caesarean hysterectomy | O82.2 | |
| Delivery by caesarean section, unspecified | O82.9 | |
| Delivery by combination of forceps and vacuum extractor | O81.5 | |
| Delivery by elective caesarean section | O82.0 | |
| Delivery by emergency caesarean section | O82.1 | |
| Delivery of viable fetus in abdominal pregnancy | O83.3 | |
| Delta-beta thalassaemia | D56.2 | |
| Delusional disorder | F22.0 | [A disorder characterized by the development either of a single delusion or of a set of related delusions that are usually persistent and sometimes lifelong. The content of the delusion or delusions is very variable. Clear and persistent auditory hallucinations (voices), schizophrenic symptoms such as delusions of control and marked blunting of affect, and definite evidence of brain disease are all incompatible with this diagnosis. However, the presence of occasional or transitory auditory hallucinations, particularly in elderly patients, does not rule out this diagnosis, provided that they are not typically schizophrenic and form only a small part of the overall clinical picture.] |
| Dementia in Alzheimer's disease | F00 | [Alzheimer disease is a primary degenerative cerebral disease of unknown etiology with characteristic neuropathological and neurochemical features. The disorder is usually insidious in onset and develops slowly but steadily over a period of several years.] |
| Dementia in Alzheimer's disease with early onset | F00.0 | [Dementia in Alzheimer disease with onset before the age of 65, with a relatively rapid deteriorating course and with marked multiple disorders of the higher cortical functions.] |
| Dementia in Alzheimer's disease with late onset | F00.1 | [Dementia in Alzheimer disease with onset after the age of 65, usually in the late 70s or thereafter, with a slow progression, and with memory impairment as the principal feature.] |
| Dementia in Alzheimer's disease, atypical or mixed type | F00.2 | |
| Dementia in Alzheimer's disease, unspecified | F00.9 | |
| Dementia in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease | F02.1 | [A progressive dementia with extensive neurological signs, due to specific neuropathological changes that are presumed to be caused by a transmissible agent. Onset is usually in middle or later life, but may be at any adult age. The course is subacute, leading to death within one to two years.] |
| Dementia in Huntington's disease | F02.2 | [A dementia occurring as part of a widespread degeneration of the brain. The disorder is transmitted by a single autosomal dominant gene. Symptoms typically emerge in the third and fourth decade. Progression is slow, leading to death usually within 10 to 15 years.] |
| Dementia in Parkinson's disease | F02.3 | [A dementia developing in the course of established Parkinson disease. No particular distinguishing clinical features have yet been demonstrated.] |