RxNorm 800187
alanine / arginine / aspartate / glutamate / glycine / histidine / isoleucine / leucine /
RxNorm Semantic Concepts
RxNorm semantic concepts for the RxCUI 800187 unique identifier include: alanine / arginine / aspartate / glutamate / glycine / histidine / isoleucine / leucine / lysine / methionine / phenylalanine / proline / serine / threonine / tryptophan / tyrosine / valine Injectable Solution (12262039).
RxNorm Atom ID: 12262039 - Semantic Clinical Drug Form
alanine / arginine / aspartate / glutamate / glycine / histidine / isoleucine / leucine / lysine / methionine / phenylalanine / proline / serine / threonine / tryptophan / tyrosine / valine Injectable Solution
- RXCUI:
- 800187 - RxNorm Unique Identifier for a concept (Concept ID)
- LAT:
- ENG - Language of the Term
- RXAUI:
- 12262039 - Unique identifier for the atom (RxNorm Atom ID)
- Is Prescribable?
- YES - This drug is part of the RxNorm Current Prescribable Content, a subset of RxNorm that includes all drugs available for prescription in the United States. The Current Prescribable subset also includes over-the-counter drugs.
- Concept Description:
- alanine / arginine / aspartate / glutamate / glycine / histidine / isoleucine / leucine / lysine / methionine / phenylalanine / proline / serine / threonine / tryptophan / tyrosine / valine Injectable Solution - Description of concept identifier
- Term Type (TTY):
- SCDF - Term type in source with name and description
- Term Type Name:
- Semantic Clinical Drug Form - Name of term type in source
- Term Type Description:
- Ingredient + Dose Form - Description of term type in source
- Code:
- 800187 - "Most useful" source asserted identifier. If the source vocabulary has more than one identifier, or a RxNorm-generated source entry identifier. (if the source vocabulary has none.)
- Suppress Flag:
- N
Suppressible flag. Values = N, O, Y, or E. N - not suppressible. O - Specific individual names (atoms) set as Obsolete because the name is no longer provided by the original source. Y - Suppressed by RxNorm editor. E - unquantified, non-prescribable drug with related quantified, prescribable drugs. NLM strongly recommends that users not alter editor-assigned suppressibility. - CVF:
- 4096 - Content view flag. RxNorm includes one value, '4096', to denote inclusion in the Current Prescribable Content subset. All rows with CVF='4096' can be found in the subset.
- Source:
- RXNORM - Concept source abbreviation
- Source Name:
- RxNorm Vocabulary - The official name for a source
- Source Version:
- 20AA_240401F - The source version
- Source Date:
- April 01, 2024 - RxNorm data last updated
- Source License Contact:
- RxNorm Customer Service
U.S. National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda
MD
United States
20894
(888) FIND-NLM
[email protected]
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/ - The source license contact information - Source Content Contact:
- RxNorm Customer Service
U.S. National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda
MD
United States
20894
(888) FIND-NLM
[email protected]
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/ - The source content contact information - Source Short Name:
- RxNorm work done by the National Library of Medicine - The short name of a source as used by the NLM Knowledge Source Server
* 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.
Patient Education
L-Tryptophan
What is it? L-Tryptophan is an essential amino acid that is necessary for making proteins. It is naturally found in red meat, poultry, eggs, and dairy.
L-tryptophan is important for many organs in the body. L-tryptophan is not made by the body and must be consumed from the diet. After absorbing L-tryptophan from food, the body converts some of it to 5-HTP and then to serotonin. Serotonin is a hormone that transmits signals between nerve cells. Changes in serotonin levels in the brain can affect mood.
People use L-tryptophan for severe PMS symptoms, depression, insomnia, and many other conditions, but there is no good scientific evidence to support any of these uses.
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