Mumps: Difference between revisions
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== Additional Info == | == Additional Info == | ||
Mumps occurs worldwide; the peak incidence is typically in the late winter to early spring, although sporadic outbreaks occur at any time of year. Mumps occurs most commonly among school-aged children and college-aged young adults; it is rare among infants less than one year of age, who have protection via maternal antibodies. | Mumps occurs worldwide; the peak incidence is typically in the late winter to early spring, although sporadic outbreaks occur at any time of year. Mumps occurs most commonly among school-aged children and college-aged young adults; it is rare among infants less than one year of age, who have protection via maternal antibodies. Mumps is highly infectious and is transmitted by respiratory droplets, direct contact, or fomites. | ||
*[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mumps mumps]] | *[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mumps mumps]] | ||
Revision as of 13:39, 10 April 2018
| ICD10 Diagnosis | |
| Dx: | Mumps |
| ICD10 code: | B26.0 |
| Pre-ICD10 counterpart: | none assigned |
| Charlson/ALERT Scale: | none |
| APACHE Como Component: | none |
| APACHE Acute Component: | none |
| Start Date: | |
| Stop Date: | |
| Data Dependencies(Reports/Indicators/Data Elements): | No results |
| External ICD10 Documentation | |
This diagnosis is a part of ICD10 collection.
Additional Info
Mumps occurs worldwide; the peak incidence is typically in the late winter to early spring, although sporadic outbreaks occur at any time of year. Mumps occurs most commonly among school-aged children and college-aged young adults; it is rare among infants less than one year of age, who have protection via maternal antibodies. Mumps is highly infectious and is transmitted by respiratory droplets, direct contact, or fomites.
- [mumps]
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