79543-5
HEDIS 2016-2019 Value Set - ABO and Rh
Discouraged
882-1 ABO and Rh group [Type] in Blood
Part Descriptions
LP36683-8 ABO & Rh group
In 1900, Landsteiner observed that the red cells of some individuals were agglutinated by the serum of others and his detailed report a year later heralded the discovery of the first human blood groups. His limited experiments on laboratory colleagues demonstrated three distinct groups; his pupils Von Decastello and Sturli discovered a fourth group in 1902. It was 25 years before these groups were shown to be inherited as Mendelian characters by means of three allelomorphic genes A, B and O and were, in fact, entities of one blood group system. For most of medicine this was considered a meaningless curiosity, but for those involved with the early development of transfusions it was quickly noted that transfusion of blood only of the same group could mean the difference between a successful outcome or a fatality. While various nomenclatures have been used to describe these factors, it was internationally decided in the mid-1940's that the characteristics would be individually identified as A, B, AB and O and the blood group system know as ABO. Since that time there have been billions of tests preformed and almost as many publications describing various aspects and associations of this blood group systems or its allelic products. The genes controlling the ABO system are located on the long arm of chromosome 9 and encode for either an a (1-3) N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase (for A) or a (1,3) galactosyltransferase (for B). These transferases incorporate immunodominant sugars (GalNAc for A; Gal for B) on to one of four different types of oligosaccharide chains (type 2 is predominant on red cells, type 1 is found in secretions, plasma and some tissue) carried on glycosphingolipid or glycoprotein molecules. The placement of the A and B antigens is dependent upon the existence of a substrate produced by the Hh blood group system (ISBT # 018). Some individuals have weakened or variant expression of A and/or B which can be attributed to inheritance of variant forms of transferases. Those individuals that have neither transferases, inheritors of two amorph genes, are group O. To date, 14 A alleles, 14 B alleles and 8 O alleles have been identified at the molecular level and more remain to be found. The ABO antigens, as stated above are not restricted to the red blood cell membrane but can be found in saliva and all body fluids except spinal fluid if the individual has inherited a secretor gene. The antigens are also found on most epithelial and endothelial cells. It also appears on lymphocytes and platelets as it is adsorbed from the plasma. Alterations of ABH expression have been found in various forms of cancer. Furthermore, antigens of the ABO system may play a role in resistance to bacteria or viruses.
Source: Serum, Cells and Rare Fluid Exchange, ABO & Rh
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- ABO & Rh group
- Property
- Type
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Bld
- Scale
- Nom
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- ABO + Rh Bld
- Display Name
- ABO and Rh group (Bld)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- ABO and Rh group, Blood
Basic Attributes
- Class
- BLDBK
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 1.0
- Last Updated
- Version 2.73
- Order vs. Observation
- Both
- Common Test Rank Get Info
- 207
Preferred Answer List LL2972-9
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
O Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278147001 Blood group O Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21321-7 | ||
O Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278148006 Blood group O Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21322-5 | ||
B Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278150003 Blood group B Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21327-4 | ||
B Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278153001 Blood group B Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21328-2 | ||
AB Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278151004 Blood group AB Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21323-3 | ||
AB Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278154007 Blood group AB Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21324-1 | ||
A Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278149003 Blood group A Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21325-8 | ||
A Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278152006 Blood group A Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21326-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
34532-2 | Blood type and Indirect antibody screen panel - Blood |
54037-7 | HEDIS 2009 panel |
57820-3 | HEDIS 2010 panel |
60442-1 | HEDIS 2011 panel |
67767-4 | HEDIS 2012 panel |
72199-3 | HEDIS 2013 panel |
74234-6 | HEDIS 2014 Value Sets |
75868-0 | HEDIS 2015 Value Sets |
79544-3 | HEDIS 2016 Value Sets |
82955-6 | HEDIS 2017 Value Sets |
87625-0 | HEDIS 2018 Value Sets |
90766-7 | HEDIS 2019 Value Sets |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
de-DE | German (Germany) | AB0 & Rh-Blutgruppensysteme: |
de-AT | German (Austria) | Synonyms: Blutgruppe AB0 + Rh |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | ABO y grupo Rh: |
es-AR | Spanish (Argentina) | grupo ABO + Rh: |
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Grupo ABO y Rh: Synonyms: Grupos sanguíneos AB0 y Rh |
et-EE | Estonian (Estonia) | ABO ja Rh: Synonyms: Juhuslik Veri |
fr-FR | French (France) | ABO et RHD groupage: |
fr-CA | French (Canada) | Groupe ABO & Rh: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | ABO & Rh, gruppo: Synonyms: Banca del sangue Gruppo ABO & |
ko-KR | Korean (Korea, Republic Of) | ABO+RH그룹: |
nl-NL | Dutch (Netherlands) | AB0 & Rh-bloedgroep: |
pt-BR | Portuguese (Brazil) | Grupo ABO+Rh: Synonyms: Rh typing; |
ru-RU | Russian (Russian Federation) | ABO & Rh: Synonyms: Кровь Номинальный; |
tr-TR | Turkish (Turkey) | ABO ve Rh: Synonyms: Tür |
uk-UA | Ukrainian (Ukraine) | АВО та Rh група: Synonyms: ABO + Rh; |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | ABO与Rh血型: Synonyms: ABO & |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
884-7 ABO and Rh group [Type] in Capillary blood
Part Descriptions
LP36683-8 ABO & Rh group
In 1900, Landsteiner observed that the red cells of some individuals were agglutinated by the serum of others and his detailed report a year later heralded the discovery of the first human blood groups. His limited experiments on laboratory colleagues demonstrated three distinct groups; his pupils Von Decastello and Sturli discovered a fourth group in 1902. It was 25 years before these groups were shown to be inherited as Mendelian characters by means of three allelomorphic genes A, B and O and were, in fact, entities of one blood group system. For most of medicine this was considered a meaningless curiosity, but for those involved with the early development of transfusions it was quickly noted that transfusion of blood only of the same group could mean the difference between a successful outcome or a fatality. While various nomenclatures have been used to describe these factors, it was internationally decided in the mid-1940's that the characteristics would be individually identified as A, B, AB and O and the blood group system know as ABO. Since that time there have been billions of tests preformed and almost as many publications describing various aspects and associations of this blood group systems or its allelic products. The genes controlling the ABO system are located on the long arm of chromosome 9 and encode for either an a (1-3) N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase (for A) or a (1,3) galactosyltransferase (for B). These transferases incorporate immunodominant sugars (GalNAc for A; Gal for B) on to one of four different types of oligosaccharide chains (type 2 is predominant on red cells, type 1 is found in secretions, plasma and some tissue) carried on glycosphingolipid or glycoprotein molecules. The placement of the A and B antigens is dependent upon the existence of a substrate produced by the Hh blood group system (ISBT # 018). Some individuals have weakened or variant expression of A and/or B which can be attributed to inheritance of variant forms of transferases. Those individuals that have neither transferases, inheritors of two amorph genes, are group O. To date, 14 A alleles, 14 B alleles and 8 O alleles have been identified at the molecular level and more remain to be found. The ABO antigens, as stated above are not restricted to the red blood cell membrane but can be found in saliva and all body fluids except spinal fluid if the individual has inherited a secretor gene. The antigens are also found on most epithelial and endothelial cells. It also appears on lymphocytes and platelets as it is adsorbed from the plasma. Alterations of ABH expression have been found in various forms of cancer. Furthermore, antigens of the ABO system may play a role in resistance to bacteria or viruses.
Source: Serum, Cells and Rare Fluid Exchange, ABO & Rh
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- ABO & Rh group
- Property
- Type
- Time
- Pt
- System
- BldC
- Scale
- Nom
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- ABO + Rh BldC
- Display Name
- ABO and Rh group (BldC)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- ABO and Rh group, Blood
Basic Attributes
- Class
- BLDBK
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 1.0
- Last Updated
- Version 2.72
- Order vs. Observation
- Both
Preferred Answer List LL2972-9
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
O Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278147001 Blood group O Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21321-7 | ||
O Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278148006 Blood group O Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21322-5 | ||
B Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278150003 Blood group B Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21327-4 | ||
B Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278153001 Blood group B Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21328-2 | ||
AB Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278151004 Blood group AB Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21323-3 | ||
AB Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278154007 Blood group AB Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21324-1 | ||
A Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278149003 Blood group A Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21325-8 | ||
A Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278152006 Blood group A Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21326-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
54037-7 | HEDIS 2009 panel |
57820-3 | HEDIS 2010 panel |
60442-1 | HEDIS 2011 panel |
67767-4 | HEDIS 2012 panel |
72199-3 | HEDIS 2013 panel |
74234-6 | HEDIS 2014 Value Sets |
75868-0 | HEDIS 2015 Value Sets |
79544-3 | HEDIS 2016 Value Sets |
82955-6 | HEDIS 2017 Value Sets |
87625-0 | HEDIS 2018 Value Sets |
90766-7 | HEDIS 2019 Value Sets |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | ABO y grupo Rh: |
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Grupo ABO y Rh: Synonyms: Grupos sanguíneos AB0 y Rh |
es-AR | Spanish (Argentina) | grupo ABO + Rh: |
et-EE | Estonian (Estonia) | ABO ja Rh: Synonyms: Juhuslik Kapillaarne veri |
fr-FR | French (France) | ABO et RHD groupage: |
fr-CA | French (Canada) | Groupe ABO & Rh: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | ABO & Rh, gruppo: Synonyms: Banca del sangue Gruppo ABO & |
ko-KR | Korean (Korea, Republic Of) | ABO+RH그룹: |
nl-NL | Dutch (Netherlands) | AB0 & Rh-bloedgroep: |
pt-BR | Portuguese (Brazil) | Grupo ABO+Rh: Synonyms: Rh typing; |
ru-RU | Russian (Russian Federation) | ABO & Rh: Synonyms: Кровь капиллярная Номинальный; |
tr-TR | Turkish (Turkey) | ABO ve Rh: Synonyms: Tür |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | ABO与Rh血型: Synonyms: ABO & |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
77397-8 ABO and Rh group [Type] in Blood by Confirmatory method
Term Description
ABO Rh typing is repeated (sometimes on a new specimen) to confirm results.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Part Descriptions
LP36683-8 ABO & Rh group
In 1900, Landsteiner observed that the red cells of some individuals were agglutinated by the serum of others and his detailed report a year later heralded the discovery of the first human blood groups. His limited experiments on laboratory colleagues demonstrated three distinct groups; his pupils Von Decastello and Sturli discovered a fourth group in 1902. It was 25 years before these groups were shown to be inherited as Mendelian characters by means of three allelomorphic genes A, B and O and were, in fact, entities of one blood group system. For most of medicine this was considered a meaningless curiosity, but for those involved with the early development of transfusions it was quickly noted that transfusion of blood only of the same group could mean the difference between a successful outcome or a fatality. While various nomenclatures have been used to describe these factors, it was internationally decided in the mid-1940's that the characteristics would be individually identified as A, B, AB and O and the blood group system know as ABO. Since that time there have been billions of tests preformed and almost as many publications describing various aspects and associations of this blood group systems or its allelic products. The genes controlling the ABO system are located on the long arm of chromosome 9 and encode for either an a (1-3) N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase (for A) or a (1,3) galactosyltransferase (for B). These transferases incorporate immunodominant sugars (GalNAc for A; Gal for B) on to one of four different types of oligosaccharide chains (type 2 is predominant on red cells, type 1 is found in secretions, plasma and some tissue) carried on glycosphingolipid or glycoprotein molecules. The placement of the A and B antigens is dependent upon the existence of a substrate produced by the Hh blood group system (ISBT # 018). Some individuals have weakened or variant expression of A and/or B which can be attributed to inheritance of variant forms of transferases. Those individuals that have neither transferases, inheritors of two amorph genes, are group O. To date, 14 A alleles, 14 B alleles and 8 O alleles have been identified at the molecular level and more remain to be found. The ABO antigens, as stated above are not restricted to the red blood cell membrane but can be found in saliva and all body fluids except spinal fluid if the individual has inherited a secretor gene. The antigens are also found on most epithelial and endothelial cells. It also appears on lymphocytes and platelets as it is adsorbed from the plasma. Alterations of ABH expression have been found in various forms of cancer. Furthermore, antigens of the ABO system may play a role in resistance to bacteria or viruses.
Source: Serum, Cells and Rare Fluid Exchange, ABO & Rh
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- ABO & Rh group
- Property
- Type
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Bld
- Scale
- Nom
- Method
- Confirm
Additional Names
- Short Name
- ABO + Rh Bld Cfm
- Display Name
- ABO and Rh group Confirm (Bld)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- ABO and Rh group, Blood
Basic Attributes
- Class
- BLDBK
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.52
- Last Updated
- Version 2.73
- Order vs. Observation
- Both
- Common Test Rank Get Info
- 693
Preferred Answer List LL2972-9
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
O Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278147001 Blood group O Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21321-7 | ||
O Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278148006 Blood group O Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21322-5 | ||
B Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278150003 Blood group B Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21327-4 | ||
B Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278153001 Blood group B Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21328-2 | ||
AB Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278151004 Blood group AB Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21323-3 | ||
AB Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278154007 Blood group AB Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21324-1 | ||
A Pos Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278149003 Blood group A Rh(D) positive (finding) | LA21325-8 | ||
A Neg Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:278152006 Blood group A Rh(D) negative (finding) | LA21326-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
79544-3 | HEDIS 2016 Value Sets |
82955-6 | HEDIS 2017 Value Sets |
87625-0 | HEDIS 2018 Value Sets |
90766-7 | HEDIS 2019 Value Sets |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Grupo ABO y Rh: Synonyms: Grupos sanguíneos AB0 y Rh |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | ABO y grupo Rh: |
et-EE | Estonian (Estonia) | ABO ja Rh: Synonyms: Juhuslik Veri |
fr-CA | French (Canada) | Groupe ABO & Rh: |
fr-FR | French (France) | ABO et RHD groupage: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | ABO & Rh, gruppo: Synonyms: Banca del sangue Gruppo ABO & |
nl-NL | Dutch (Netherlands) | AB0 & Rh-bloedgroep: |
ru-RU | Russian (Russian Federation) | ABO & Rh: Synonyms: Кровь Номинальный; |
tr-TR | Turkish (Turkey) | ABO ve Rh: Synonyms: Teyid Tür |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | ABO与Rh血型: Synonyms: ABO & |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.