Terminologies de Santé
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Terminologies de Santé - version de développement local (v1.4.0) construite par les outils de publication FHIR (HL7® FHIR® Standard). Voir le répertoire des versions publiées

ValueSet: RoleClassIngredientEntity

Official URL: https://smt.esante.gouv.fr/fhir/ValueSet/jdv-hl7-v3-RoleClassIngredientEntity-cisis Version: 20251028115833
Active as of 2025-10-28 Responsible: Agence du Numérique en Santé(ANS) -2 - 10 Rue d'Oradour-sur-Glane, 75015 Paris Computable Name: RoleClassIngredientEntity
Other Identifiers: OID:2.16.840.1.113883.1.11.10430

RoleClassIngredientEntity

References

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Définition logique (CLD)

version : 5; Dernière mise à jour : 2025-10-29 10:45:22+0100; Langue : fr-FR

Profil: Shareable ValueSetversion : null4.0.1)

  • Include ce(s) code(s) tel quil(s) est (sont) défini(s) dans http://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-RoleClass version 📦4.0.0
    CodeAffichageDéfinition
    INGRIngrédientRelates a component (player) to a mixture (scoper). E.g., Glucose and Water are ingredients of D5W, latex may be an ingredient in a tracheal tube.
    ACTIIngredient actif**Definition:** a therapeutically active ingredient (player) in a mixture (scoper), where the mixture is typically a manufactured pharmaceutical. It is unknown if the quantity of such an ingredient is expressed precisely in terms of the playing ingredient substance, or, if it is specified in terms of a closely related substance (active moiety or reference substance).
    ADJVAdjuvantA component (player) added to enhance the action of an active ingredient (scoper) (in the manner of a catalyst) but which has no active effect in and of itself. Such ingredients are significant in defining equivalence of products in a way that inactive ingredients are not.
    ADTVAdditifAn ingredient (player) that is added to a base (scoper), that amounts to a minor part of the overall mixture.
    BASEBaseA base ingredient (player) is what comprises the major part of a mixture (scoper). E.g., Water in most i.v. solutions, or Vaseline in salves. Among all ingredients of a material, there should be only one base. A base substance can, in turn, be a mixture.
    CNTMIngredient contaminantAn ingredient whose presence is not intended but may not be reasonably avoided given the circumstances of the mixture's nature or origin.
    IACTIngredient inactifAn ingredient which is not considered therapeutically active, e.g., colors, flavors, stabilizers, or preservatives, fillers, or structural components added to an active ingredient in order to facilitate administration of the active ingredient but without being considered therapeutically active. An inactive ingredient need not be biologically inert, e.g., might be active as an allergen or might have a pleasant taste, but is not an essential constituent delivering the therapeutic effect.
    MECHIngrédient mécaniqueAn ingredient (player) of a medication (scoper) that is inseparable from the active ingredients, but has no intended chemical or pharmaceutical effect itself, but which may have some systemic effect on the patient.

    An example is a collagen matrix used as a base for transplanting skin cells. The collagen matrix can be left permanently in the graft site. Because it is of bovine origin, the patient may exhibit allergies or may have cultural objections to its use.

 

Expansion

Ce jeu de valeur (ValueSet) contient 8 concepts

SystèmeCodeAffichage (fr-FR)DéfinitionJSONXML
http://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-RoleClass  INGRIngrédient

Relates a component (player) to a mixture (scoper). E.g., Glucose and Water are ingredients of D5W, latex may be an ingredient in a tracheal tube.

http://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-RoleClass  ACTIIngredient actif

Definition: a therapeutically active ingredient (player) in a mixture (scoper), where the mixture is typically a manufactured pharmaceutical. It is unknown if the quantity of such an ingredient is expressed precisely in terms of the playing ingredient substance, or, if it is specified in terms of a closely related substance (active moiety or reference substance).

http://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-RoleClass  ADJVAdjuvant

A component (player) added to enhance the action of an active ingredient (scoper) (in the manner of a catalyst) but which has no active effect in and of itself. Such ingredients are significant in defining equivalence of products in a way that inactive ingredients are not.

http://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-RoleClass  ADTVAdditif

An ingredient (player) that is added to a base (scoper), that amounts to a minor part of the overall mixture.

http://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-RoleClass  BASEBase

A base ingredient (player) is what comprises the major part of a mixture (scoper). E.g., Water in most i.v. solutions, or Vaseline in salves. Among all ingredients of a material, there should be only one base. A base substance can, in turn, be a mixture.

http://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-RoleClass  CNTMIngredient contaminant

An ingredient whose presence is not intended but may not be reasonably avoided given the circumstances of the mixture's nature or origin.

http://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-RoleClass  IACTIngredient inactif

An ingredient which is not considered therapeutically active, e.g., colors, flavors, stabilizers, or preservatives, fillers, or structural components added to an active ingredient in order to facilitate administration of the active ingredient but without being considered therapeutically active. An inactive ingredient need not be biologically inert, e.g., might be active as an allergen or might have a pleasant taste, but is not an essential constituent delivering the therapeutic effect.

http://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-RoleClass  MECHIngrédient mécanique

An ingredient (player) of a medication (scoper) that is inseparable from the active ingredients, but has no intended chemical or pharmaceutical effect itself, but which may have some systemic effect on the patient.

An example is a collagen matrix used as a base for transplanting skin cells. The collagen matrix can be left permanently in the graft site. Because it is of bovine origin, the patient may exhibit allergies or may have cultural objections to its use.


Explanation of the columns that may appear on this page:

Level A few code lists that FHIR defines are hierarchical - each code is assigned a level. In this scheme, some codes are under other codes, and imply that the code they are under also applies
System The source of the definition of the code (when the value set draws in codes defined elsewhere)
Code The code (used as the code in the resource instance)
Display The display (used in the display element of a Coding). If there is no display, implementers should not simply display the code, but map the concept into their application
Definition An explanation of the meaning of the concept
Comments Additional notes about how to use the code