RxNorm 830458

rabies virus vaccine flury-lep strain 2.5 UNT/ML

RxNorm Semantic Concepts

RxNorm semantic concepts for the RxCUI 830458 unique identifier include: rabies virus vaccine flury-lep strain 2.5 UNT/ML (2939885).

RxNorm Atom ID: 2939885 - Semantic Clinical Drug Component
rabies virus vaccine flury-lep strain 2.5 UNT/ML

RXCUI:
830458 - RxNorm Unique Identifier for a concept (Concept ID)
LAT:
ENG - Language of the Term
RXAUI:
2939885 - 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:
rabies virus vaccine flury-lep strain 2.5 UNT/ML - Description of concept identifier
Term Type (TTY):
SCDC - Term type in source with name and description
Term Type Name:
Semantic Clinical Drug Component - Name of term type in source
Term Type Description:
Ingredient + Strength - Description of term type in source
Code:
830458 - "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:
March 04, 2024 - RxNorm data last updated
Source License Contact:
RxNorm Customer Service

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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

RxNorm Atom 2939885 Attributes

PropertyValueExplanation
RXN BOSS STRENGTH DENOM UNITMLRXN Boss Strength Denom Unit
RXN BOSS STRENGTH DENOM VALUE1RXN Boss Strength Denom Value
RXN BOSS STRENGTH NUM UNITUNTRXN Boss Strength Num Unit
RXN BOSS STRENGTH NUM VALUE2.5RXN Boss Strength Num Value
RXN STRENGTH2.5 UNT/MLStrength plus unit of SCDC

* 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

Rabies Vaccine


What is rabies? Rabies is a serious disease. It is caused by a virus. Rabies is mainly a disease of animals. Humans get rabies when they are bitten by infected animals. At first there might not be any symptoms. But weeks, or even years after a bite, rabies can cause pain, fatigue, headaches, fever, and irritability. These are followed by seizures, hallucinations, and paralysis. Rabies is almost always fatal. Wild animals, especially bats, are the most common source of human rabies infection in the United States. Skunks, raccoons, dogs, and cats can also transmit the disease. Human rabies is rare in the United States. There have been only 55 cases diagnosed since 1990. However, between 16,000 and 39,000 people are treated each year for possible exposure to rabies after animal bites. Also, rabies is far more common in other parts of the world, with about 40,000 to 70,000 rabies-related deaths each year. Bites from unvaccinated dogs cause most of these cases. Rabies vaccine can prevent rabies.
[Learn More]


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