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Cheyne-Stokes respiration

A Wisdom Archive on Cheyne-Stokes respiration

Cheyne-Stokes respiration

A selection of articles related to Cheyne-Stokes respiration

We recommend this article: Cheyne-Stokes respiration - 1, and also this: Cheyne-Stokes respiration - 2.
Cheyne-Stokes respiration

ARTICLES RELATED TO Cheyne-Stokes respiration

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Since writing someone's name with a range of years, such as John Doe (1950 - 2000), implies that the subject has died, it would be a faux pas to do this on someone's birthday cake or card. This is unlike an anniversary of something. In China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan the number 4 is often associated to death due to the sound of the Chinese, Japanese, and Korean words for four and death being similar. For this reason, hospitals and hotels often omit the 4th, 14th, etc. floors. However, ISO 3166-2 codes for Japan does have JP-04 for Miyagi Pref ...

See also:

Death, Death - Biological death, Death - Criteria of human death, Death - Defining the moment of human death, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - Causes of human death in the US, Death - Consciousness after death, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Interpretations of death

In almost all societies, death has one or several symbols associated with it. Common symbols of death in Western cultures include the grim reaper and the color black; conversely, in certain Eastern cultures, the color white is considered symbolic of death. The grave is a metonym for death. Biologically, death can occur to wholes, to parts, or to both. For example, it is possible for individual cells and even organs to die, and yet for the organism as a whole to continue to live; many individual cells live for only a short time, and so most of an organism's cells (except for nerve and muscle) are ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Most causal causes of death, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Interpretations of death

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Signs of approaching death

Death - When death is imminent. Physical death is a progressive process, during which there are some signs that usually indicate that death is imminent. Not all of the following changes occur, nor do they necessarily occur in any particular order, as the body shuts down during the dying process. In general, the following information may help anticipate and understand changes that appear as an individual approaches death and is “actively dying.” The dying individual may become increasingly tired a ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Causes of death in the United States, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Signs of approaching death

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Criteria of human death: medical, religious, and legal

Human death can be defined by three intrinsically different but overlapping domains: medical, religious, and legal. These different domains and their importance have evolved over time, and opinions vary from person to person. So when talking about death, it is important to specify which domain we are referring to, and to have a general understanding of how each defines death. There are various ways of defining medical death. Early in Western culture, death was first associated with cessation of the heart, and then later the lungs. Whe ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical, religious, and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Causes of death in the United States, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Criteria of human death: medical, religious, and legal

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Causes of death in the United States

The causes of death vary by area and by age group. In 2002 in the U.S. the top 10 causes of death were: Heart disease: 696,947 Cancer: 557,271 Stroke: 162,672 Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 124,816 Accidents (unintentional injuries): 106,742 Diabetes: 73,249 Influenza/pneumonia: 65,681 Alzheimer's disease: 58,866 Nephritis, nephrotic synd ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Causes of death in the United States, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Causes of death in the United States

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Personification of death

Main article: Death (personification) Death is also a mythological figure who has existed in popular culture since the earliest days of storytelling. The traditional Western image of Death, known as the Grim Reaper—usually resembling a skeleton, wearing black robes and carrying a scythe—is employed on a tarot card and in various television shows and films. Some examples: Death is a major character in the Discworld series by Terry Pratchett. Humorous depictions of Death, often with a Grim ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Causes of death in the United States, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Personification of death

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal

Human death can be defined by three intrinsically different but overlapping domains: medical, religious, and legal. These different domains and their importance have evolved over time, and opinions vary from person to person. So when talking about death, it is important to specify which domain we are referring to, and to have a general understanding of how each defines death. There are various ways of defining medical death. Early in Western culture, death was first associated with cessation of the heart, and then later the lungs. Whe ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Causes of death in the United States, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings: Encyclopedia II - ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R00-R69 - Symptoms and signs

ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R00-R09 Circulatory and respiratory systems. (R00) Abnormalities of heart beat (R000) Tachycardia, unspecified (R001) Bradycardia, unspecified (R002) Palpitations (R008) Other and unspecified abnormalities of heart beat (R01) Cardiac murmurs and other cardiac sounds (R010) Benign and innocent cardiac murmurs (R011) Cardiac murmur, unspecified (R ...

See also:

ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R00-R69 - Symptoms and signs, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R00-R09 Circulatory and respiratory systems, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R10-R19 Digestive system and abdomen, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R20-R23 Skin and subcutaneous tissue, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R25-R29 Nervous and musculoskeletal systems, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R30-R39 Urinary system, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R40-R46 Cognition perception emotional state and behaviour, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R47-R49 Speech and voice, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R50-R69 General symptoms and signs, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R70-R99 - Abnormal clinical and laboratory findings not elsewhere classified, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R70-R79 On examination of blood without diagnosis, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R80-R82 On examination of urine without diagnosis, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R83-R89 On examination of other body fluids substances and tissues without diagnosis, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R90-R94 On diagnostic imaging and in function studies without diagnosis, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R95-R99 - Ill-defined and unknown causes of mortality

Read more here: » ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings: Encyclopedia II - ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R00-R69 - Symptoms and signs

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal

Human death can be defined by three intrinsically different but overlapping domains: medical, religious, and legal. These different domains and their importance have evolved over time, and opinions vary from person to person. So when talking about death, it is important to specify which domain we are referring to, and to have a general understanding of how each defines death. There are various ways of defining medical death. Early in Western culture, death was first associated with cessation of the heart, and then later the lungs. Whe ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Most causal causes of death, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Signs of approaching death

Death - When death is imminent. Physical death is a progressive process, during which there are some signs that usually indicate that death is imminent. Not all of the following changes occur, nor do they necessarily occur in any particular order, as the body shuts down during the dying process. In general, the following information may help anticipate and understand changes that appear as an individual approaches death and is “actively dying.” The dying individual may become increasingly tired a ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Most causal causes of death, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Signs of approaching death

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Most causal causes of death

The causes of death vary by area and by age group. In 2002 in the U.S. the top 10 causes of death were: Heart disease: 696,947 Cancer: 557,271 Stroke: 162,672 Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 124,816 Accidents (unintentional injuries): 106,742 Diabetes: 73,249 Influenza/pneumonia: 65,681 Alzheimer's disease: 58,866 Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Most causal causes of death, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Most causal causes of death

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Biological death

Death is the irreversable ending of life. Biologically, death can occur to wholes, to parts, or to both. For example, it is possible for individual cells and even organs to die, and yet for the organism as a whole to continue to live; many individual cells live for only a short time, and so most of an organism's cells are continually dying and being replaced by new ones. When organisms die most of their cells live for some time afterward. ...

See also:

Death, Death - Biological death, Death - Criteria of human death, Death - Defining the moment of human death, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - Causes of human death in the US, Death - Consciousness after death, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Biological death

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Criteria of human death

Human death can be defined by three intrinsically different but overlapping domains: biological, legal, and religious. These different domains and their importance have evolved over time, and opinions vary from person to person. There are various ways of defining biological death. Early in Western culture, death was first associated with cessation of the heart, and then later the lungs. When these stopped working, a person was considered dead. It was only later that attention shifted to the brain. One test for brain activity was to po ...

See also:

Death, Death - Biological death, Death - Criteria of human death, Death - Defining the moment of human death, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - Causes of human death in the US, Death - Consciousness after death, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Criteria of human death

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Physiological consequences of human death

For the human body, the physiological consequences of death follow a recognized sequence through early changes into bloating, then decay to changes after decay and finally skeletal remains. Soon after death (15–120 minutes depending on various factors), the body begins to cool (algor mortis), becomes pallid (pallor mortis), and internal sphincter muscles relax, leading to the release of urine, feces, and stomach contents if the body is moved. The blood moves to pool in the lowest parts of the body, livor mortis (dependent lividity), ...

See also:

Death, Death - Biological death, Death - Criteria of human death, Death - Defining the moment of human death, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - Causes of human death in the US, Death - Consciousness after death, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Physiological consequences of human death

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Defining the moment of human death

There is an asymmetry between life and death. While cells and organisms may die, they have never been observed to arise from non-living material (spontaneous generation), as found by Louis Pasteur in the late 19th century. In human affairs, we are normally concerned with the life and death of a person, not his or her parts. Identifying the exact moment of death is important for a number of reasons. It allows for the correct time on death certificates, and helps ensure that a person's legal Will is executed only after he or she is trul ...

See also:

Death, Death - Biological death, Death - Criteria of human death, Death - Defining the moment of human death, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - Causes of human death in the US, Death - Consciousness after death, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Defining the moment of human death

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - Settlement of dead human bodies

In most cultures, before the onset of significant decay, the body undergoes some type of ritual disposal, usually either cremation or deposition in a tomb that is often a hole in the ground called a grave, but may also be a sarcophagus, crypt, sepulchre, or ossuary, a mound or barrow, or a monumental surface structure such as a mausoleum (exemplified by the Taj Mahal). In Tibet, one method of corpse disposal is sky burial, which involves placing the body of the deceased on high ground (a mountain) and leaving it for birds of prey to d ...

See also:

Death, Death - Biological death, Death - Criteria of human death, Death - Defining the moment of human death, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - Causes of human death in the US, Death - Consciousness after death, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Settlement of dead human bodies

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - What happens to humans after death?

The second question is of what, apart from the cessation of metabolism and the onset of physiological processes of decay, happens, especially to humans, during and after death (or "once dead", thinking of death as a permanent state). In particular, there is the question of what becomes of consciousness or the soul. Such questions are of long standing, and belief in an afterlife (such as an underworld), or in reincarnation, are common and ancient. The belief that any and all consciousness ceases to exist at death, and that death ("after-life" ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Causes of death in the United States, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - What happens to humans after death?

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - When is a person dead?

There is an asymmetry between life and death. While cells and organisms may die, they have never been observed to arise from non-living material (spontaneous generation), as found by Louis Pasteur in the late 19th century. In human affairs, we are normally concerned with the life and death of a person, not his or her parts. Identifying the exact moment of death is important for a number of reasons. It allows for the correct time on death certificates, and helps ensure that a person's legal Will is executed only after he or she is trul ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Causes of death in the United States, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - When is a person dead?

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - When is a person dead?

There is an asymmetry between life and death. While cells and organisms may die, they have never been observed to arise from non-living material (spontaneous generation), as found by Louis Pasteur in the late 19th century. In human affairs, we are normally concerned with the life and death of a person, not his or her parts. Identifying the exact moment of death is important for a number of reasons. It allows for the correct time on death certificates, and helps ensure that a person's legal Will is executed only after he or she is trul ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Most causal causes of death, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - When is a person dead?

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Encyclopedia II - Death - What happens to humans after death?

The second question is of what, apart from the cessation of metabolism and the onset of physiological processes of decay, happens, especially to humans, during and after death (or "once dead", thinking of death as a permanent state). In particular, there is the question of what becomes of consciousness or the soul. Such questions are of long standing, and belief in an afterlife (such as an underworld), or in reincarnation, are common and ancient. The belief that any and all consciousness ceases to exist at death, and that death ("after-life" ...

See also:

Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Most causal causes of death, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions

Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - What happens to humans after death?

Cheyne-Stokes respiration: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings: Encyclopedia II - ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R70-R99 - Abnormal clinical and laboratory findings not elsewhere classified

ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R70-R79 On examination of blood without diagnosis. (R70) Elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate and abnormality of plasma viscosity (R700) Elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (R701) Abnormal plasma viscosity (R71) Abnormality of red blood cells (R72) Abnormality of white blood cells, not elsewhere classified (R73) Elevated blood glucose level (R730) Abnormal ...

See also:

ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R00-R69 - Symptoms and signs, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R00-R09 Circulatory and respiratory systems, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R10-R19 Digestive system and abdomen, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R20-R23 Skin and subcutaneous tissue, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R25-R29 Nervous and musculoskeletal systems, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R30-R39 Urinary system, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R40-R46 Cognition perception emotional state and behaviour, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R47-R49 Speech and voice, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R50-R69 General symptoms and signs, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R70-R99 - Abnormal clinical and laboratory findings not elsewhere classified, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R70-R79 On examination of blood without diagnosis, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R80-R82 On examination of urine without diagnosis, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R83-R89 On examination of other body fluids substances and tissues without diagnosis, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R90-R94 On diagnostic imaging and in function studies without diagnosis, ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R95-R99 - Ill-defined and unknown causes of mortality

Read more here: » ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings: Encyclopedia II - ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings - R70-R99 - Abnormal clinical and laboratory findings not elsewhere classified




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