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The SNOMED CT logical model provides the fundamental structure of SNOMED CT and specifies how the components can be managed in an implementation setting to meet a variety of primary and secondary uses.

What is this?

The SNOMED CT logical model defines the way in which each type of SNOMED CT component and derivative is related and represented. The core component types in SNOMED CT are concepts, descriptions and relationships. The logical model therefore specifies a structured representation of the concepts used to represent clinical meanings, the descriptions used to refer to these, and the relationships between the concepts.

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A set of textual descriptions are assigned to every concept. These provide the human readable form of a concept. Two types of description are used to represent every concept - Fully Specified Name (FSN) and Synonym.
The FSN represents a unique, unambiguous description of a concept's meaning. The FSN is not intended to be displayed in clinical records, but is instead used to disambiguate the distinct meaning of each different concept. This is particularly useful when different concepts are referred to by the same commonly used word or phrase. Each concept can have only one FSN in each language or dialect.
A synonym represents a term that can be used to display or select a concept. A concept may have several synonyms. This allows users of SNOMED CT to use the terms they prefer to refer to a specific clinical meaning. Concepts can have multiple synonyms, and the associated terms are not necessarily unique – thus two concepts can have the same synonym term. Interpretation of a synonymous term therefore depends on the concept identifier.
Each concept has one synonym which is marked as |preferred | in a given language, dialect, or context of use. This is known as the "preferred term" and is a word or phrase commonly used by clinicians to name that concept. In each language, dialect or context of use, one and only one synonym can be marked as | preferred |. Any number of other synonyms that are valid in a language, dialect or context of use can be marked as | acceptable |.

Example of descriptions for a single concept (US - English)

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A relationship represents an association between two concepts. Relationships are used to logically define the meaning of a concept in a way that can be processed by a computer. A third concept, called a relationship type (or attribute), is used to represent the meaning of the association between the source and destination concepts. There are different types of relationships available within SNOMED CT.

Subtype

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Relationships

Subtype relationships are the most widely used type of relationship. Subtype relationships use the |is a| relationship type and are therefore also known as |is a| relationships. Almost all active SNOMED CT concepts are the source of at least one |is a| relationship. The only exception is the root concept |SNOMED CT Concept| which is the most general concept. The |is a| relationship states that the source concept is a subtype of the destination concept. SNOMED CT relationships are directional and the |is a| relationship read in the reverse direction states that the destination concept is a supertype of the source concept.

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Illustration of SNOMED CT subtype hierarchy and terms used to describe it

Attribute

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Relationships

An attribute relationship contributes to the definition of the source concept by associating it with the value of a defining characteristic. The characteristic (attribute) is specified by the relationship type and the value is provided by the destination of the relationship.
The following example shows the defining relationships of the concept |abscess of heart|. The attribute relationships |associated morphology| and |finding site| are used to associate the source concept |abscess of heart| to respectively the target concepts |abscess|, and |heart structure|.

Example of defining relationships

Unlike |is a| relationships, which are used to define all concepts, the applicability of each type of attribute relationship is limited to a defined domain and range. The domain refers to the concepts that can serve as source concepts for that type of attribute relationship. The range refers to the concepts that can serve as destinations (values) for those attributes. The domain and range specification ensure consistent definitions that can be used to infer additional semantic relationships to deliver reliable meaning-based retrieval of the composed meanings.
The first example below violates the domain constraint of |causative agent|, as descendants of |body structure| are not in the domain of |causative agent|. The second example below is valid with respect to the domain constraint of |causative agent|, because |disorder| is in the domain of |causative agent|. However, this example violates the range constraint of |causative agent|, as descendants of morphological abnormality are not in the range of |causative agent|.


Example of erroneous relationships

Fully

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Defined and

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Primitive Concepts

In SNOMED CT every concept is specified as either fully defined or primitive.
A concept is fully-defined if its defining characteristics are sufficient to distinguish its meaning from other similar concepts. One example is that the concept |acute disease| is fully-defined by its two defining relationships. The first relationship is |is a| |disease| and the second relationship is |clinical course| |sudden onset AND/OR short duration|. Stating that this concept is fully-defined means that any concept that |is a| |disease| and has a |clinical course| of |sudden onset AND/OR short duration| is a subtype of this concept (or the concept itself).
A concept is primitive (not fully-defined) if its defining characteristics are not sufficient to uniquely distinguish its meaning from other similar concepts. One example is that the primitive concepts |disease| and |drug action| share the same defining characteristics: namely a relationship of type |is a| to the concept |clinical finding|. This is despite the fact that the concepts |disease| and |drug action| represent different clinical ideas.

Reference

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Sets

Reference Sets (Refsets) are a standard way to represent additional non-defining information about members of a set of components. Reference Sets are important as they can be used in SNOMED CT enabled applications to constrain, configure and enhance functionality to match requirements for different use cases. Some examples of the many uses of reference sets are to represent:

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