All terms in ICD10
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign body in ear | T16 | |
| Foreign body in genitourinary tract | T19 | |
| Foreign body in alimentary tract | T18 | |
| Burns and corrosions of external body surface, specified by site | T20-T25.9 | |
| Malignant neoplasm of palate, unspecified | C05.9 | |
| Burn and corrosion confined to eye and adnexa | T26 | |
| Malignant neoplasm overlapping palate site | C05.8 | |
| Malignant neoplasm of soft palate | C05.1 | |
| Malignant neoplasm of uvula | C05.2 | |
| Malignant neoplasm of hard palate | C05.0 | |
| Streptococcus, group A, as the cause of diseases classified to other chapters | B95.0 | |
| Streptococcus and staphylococcus as the cause of diseases classified to other chapters | B95 | |
| Mental and behavioural disorders due to psychoactive substance use | F10-F19.9 | [This block contains a wide variety of disorders that differ in severity and clinical form but that are all attributable to the use of one or more psychoactive substances, which may or may not have been medically prescribed. The third character of the code identifies the substance involved, and the fourth character specifies the clinical state. The codes should be used, as required, for each substance specified, but it should be noted that not all fourth character codes are applicable to all substances. Identification of the psychoactive substance should be based on as many sources of information as possible. These include self-report data, analysis of blood and other body fluids, characteristic physical and psychological symptoms, clinical signs and behaviour, and other evidence such as a drug being in the patient's possession or reports from informed third parties. Many drug users take more than one type of psychoactive substance. The main diagnosis should be classified, whenever possible, according to the substance or class of substances that has caused or contributed most to the presenting clinical syndrome. Other diagnoses should be coded when other psychoactive substances have been taken in intoxicating amounts (common fourth character .0) or to the extent of causing harm (common fourth character .1), dependence (common fourth character .2) or other disorders (common fourth character .3-.9). Only in cases in which patterns of psychoactive substance-taking are chaotic and indiscriminate, or in which the contributions of different psychoactive substances are inextricably mixed, should the diagnosis of disorders resulting from multiple drug use (F19.-) be used.] |
| Neoplasm of uncertain or unknown behavior of respiratory organ, unspecified | D38.6 | |
| Unspecified streptococcus as the cause of diseases classified to other chapters | B95.5 | |
| Other injuries involving multiple body regions, not elsewhere classified | T06 | |
| Neoplasm of uncertain or unknown behavior of thymus | D38.4 | |
| Staphylococcus aureus as the cause of diseases classified to other chapters | B95.6 | |
| Traumatic amputations involving multiple body regions | T05 | |
| Neoplasm of uncertain or unknown behavior of other respiratory organs | D38.5 |