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The Guilty, the Innocent, and the SNOMED Shuffle

The Guilty, the Innocent, and the SNOMED Shuffle. Attributes in transition. Currently accepted attributes. Causative agent Associated etiologic finding Temporally follows. Causative agent. Asserts A definitely caused by B Accepts as values: Organisms Substances Physical forces.

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The Guilty, the Innocent, and the SNOMED Shuffle

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  1. The Guilty, the Innocent, and the SNOMED Shuffle Attributes in transition

  2. Currently accepted attributes • Causative agent • Associated etiologic finding • Temporally follows

  3. Causative agent • Asserts A definitely caused by B • Accepts as values: • Organisms • Substances • Physical forces

  4. Examples Leprosy Causative agent Mycobacterium leprae Polybrominated biphenyl poisoning Causative agent Polybrominated biphenyl High altitude cerebral edema Causative agent Low air pressure Causative agent High altitude

  5. Associated etiologic finding • Also asserts A definitely caused by B • Accepts as values • Findings • Disorders

  6. Examples: • Graft failure due to thrombosis Associated etiologic finding Thrombosis • Iron deficiency anemia Associated etiologic finding Iron deficiency

  7. Temporally follows • Asserts that A occurred after B • Neither asserts nor excludes causal relationship between A and B • Accepts as values • Findings • Disorders • Procedures

  8. Examples • Post-measles encephalitis Temporally follows Measles • Post-operative hemorrhage Temporally follows Surgical procedure

  9. Problems and limitations: • Causality vs. association not always clear • Confusion between Associated etiologic finding and Temporally follows • Lack of generic “associated with” attribute • Cannot define a procedure as cause of a disorder or finding

  10. Causality attributes appropriate if: • A is known to be caused by B • Causality keywords: • due to • caused by • induced by • resulting from

  11. Ambiguous associations • Causality unclear in many cases • Keywords: • associated with • in • with • modified by • during • complicating • secondary to

  12. So how do I say: “A associated with B” ? • Use Temporally follows (old solution) • Use Associated with (proposed new solution) • DON’T! (preferred solution)

  13. Temporally follows = associated with? • PRO • Previously recommended • Uses existing attribute • CON • A and B may occur simultaneously • Loss of “A POST B” as distinct meaning

  14. Associated with • Proposed new attribute • Neither asserts nor excludes causality • Would be parent of: • Causative agent • Associated etiologic finding • Temporally follows

  15. Associated with • Pro: • Unambiguous way to express ambiguous associations • Con • Not yet accepted • Potential overlap with Temporally follows

  16. Proposed use of Associated with: • Will be used to express A + B without specifying nature of relationship between A and B • Examples: • Tuberculosis in pregnancy • AIDS with pneumonia

  17. Why bother? • Good question! • We DO NOT recommend using “Associated with” to post-coordinate concepts • If you cannot specify the nature of the relationship between two concepts, do not conjoin them • Enter as separate diagnoses or findings

  18. Temporally follows vs. Associated with: • Potential overlap • Both concepts neither assert nor exclude causality • Temporally follows has been previously used to mean “associated with” • Proposed new attribute hierarchy does not clearly define distinction between Temporally follows (may become “Sequela of”) and Associated with in use.

  19. Temporally follows vs. Associated etiologic finding If A caused B, then by definition B preceded A (if only by a nanosecond). The lag in time between A and B, however, is often inapparent or insignificant. • Associated etiologic finding stresses causality • Temporally follows stresses time sequence

  20. Proposed guideline: Use Temporally follows only when A necessarily follows B by a clinical significant period of time. • Keywords: • after • following • post • subsequent to

  21. Example 1 Post-viral encephalitis Temporally follows Viral infection Occurs after resolution of viral infection Compare to: Viral encephalitis Causative agent Virus

  22. Example 2 Post-operative hemorrhage Temporally follows Surgical procedure Compare to: Intra-operative hemorrhage Associated with Surgical procedure

  23. Example 3 Post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis Temporally follows Streptococcal infection Associated etiologic finding Streptococcal infection If association is BOTH temporal and causal, both attributes are used.

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