NDC to RxNorm Crosswalk 62332-318 Desipramine Hydrochloride
View RxNorm Concepts, RxCUIs, Term Types
RxNorm Crosswalk Information
The RxNorm crosswalk for NDC code 62332-318 indicates multiple RxNorm Concept Unique Identifiers known as RxCUIs associated to the product Desipramine Hydrochloride . The unique RxCUI concepts linked to this product are: 1099288, 1099292, 1099296, 1099300, 1099304 and 1099316. RxCUIs are identifiers that group each chemically distinct drug into a single code regardless of manufacturer or package size. Drugs mapped to the same RxCUI are considered the same drug as having the same ingredients, strengths, and dose forms. The RxNorm mapping may include repeated RxCUI concepts with different descriptions and term types.
RxCUI: 1099288
- Concept: desipramine HCl 10 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): PSN - Prescribable Name
Synonym of another TTY, given for clarity and for display purposes in electronic prescribing applications. Only one PSN per concept.
- Concept: desipramine hydrochloride 10 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): SCD - Semantic Clinical Drug
Ingredient + Strength + Dose Form
RxCUI: 1099292
- Concept: desipramine HCl 100 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): PSN - Prescribable Name
Synonym of another TTY, given for clarity and for display purposes in electronic prescribing applications. Only one PSN per concept.
- Concept: desipramine hydrochloride 100 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): SCD - Semantic Clinical Drug
Ingredient + Strength + Dose Form
RxCUI: 1099296
- Concept: desipramine HCl 150 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): PSN - Prescribable Name
Synonym of another TTY, given for clarity and for display purposes in electronic prescribing applications. Only one PSN per concept.
- Concept: desipramine hydrochloride 150 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): SCD - Semantic Clinical Drug
Ingredient + Strength + Dose Form
RxCUI: 1099300
- Concept: desipramine HCl 25 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): PSN - Prescribable Name
Synonym of another TTY, given for clarity and for display purposes in electronic prescribing applications. Only one PSN per concept.
- Concept: desipramine hydrochloride 25 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): SCD - Semantic Clinical Drug
Ingredient + Strength + Dose Form
RxCUI: 1099304
- Concept: desipramine HCl 50 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): PSN - Prescribable Name
Synonym of another TTY, given for clarity and for display purposes in electronic prescribing applications. Only one PSN per concept.
- Concept: desipramine hydrochloride 50 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): SCD - Semantic Clinical Drug
Ingredient + Strength + Dose Form
RxCUI: 1099316
- Concept: desipramine HCl 75 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): PSN - Prescribable Name
Synonym of another TTY, given for clarity and for display purposes in electronic prescribing applications. Only one PSN per concept.
- Concept: desipramine hydrochloride 75 MG Oral Tablet
- Term Type (TTY): SCD - Semantic Clinical Drug
Ingredient + Strength + Dose Form
What is RxNorm?
RxNorm is a system developed and maintained by the National Library of Medicine (NLM). RxNorm is a normalized naming system for generic and branded drugs. RxNorm is also a tool that supports interoperability between different drug terminologies and other naming systems.
The goal of RxNorm is to facilitate the efficient exchange of drug information among the computer systems used by hospitals, pharmacies, clinics and other organizations. To achieve this goal RxNorm provides normalized names and unique identifiers for drugs and medicines.
What is an RXCUI?
An RxCUI is machine readable unique identifier that defines the same common concept. Every name and code provided to the National Library of Medicine receives an RXCUI. Drug products that map to the same RxCUI are considered the same drug while drugs that are distinct will have different RxCUIs.
What is a Term Type (TTY)?
Term Types (TTYs) are used to specify the level of complexity of each RxCUI term.
* This product uses publicly available data courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM), National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services; NLM is not responsible for the product and does not endorse or recommend this or any other product.