Outbound Relationships |
Type |
Target |
Active |
Characteristic |
Refinability |
Group |
Values |
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Is a |
Mechanical complication of cardiac device, implant AND/OR graft |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
|
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Is a |
Complication of bypass graft |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
|
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Temporally follows |
Procedure |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
|
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Temporally follows |
Transplantation to recipient (procedure) |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
|
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
After |
Transplantation to recipient (procedure) |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
|
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
After |
Intentional, structural alteration of the human body by mechanical, thermal, light-based, electromagnetic, or chemical means, and/or by the incision or destruction of tissues using instruments to cut, burn, vaporize, freeze, suture, probe, or manipulate by closed reductions. |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
|
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Associated with |
Intentional, structural alteration of the human body by mechanical, thermal, light-based, electromagnetic, or chemical means, and/or by the incision or destruction of tissues using instruments to cut, burn, vaporize, freeze, suture, probe, or manipulate by closed reductions. |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
|
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Associated with |
A surgical technique in which tissues, cells, or synthetic material, commonly from the same person, another individual, or an animal, are transferred to a recipient site. Grafts of skin and tissue fragments that are completely detached from their original source typically lack their own intrinsic blood supply and rely on the recipient site for vascular perfusion and survival. While solid organs are almost exclusively transplanted and skin and tissues are generally grafted, the terms graft and transplant are sometimes used interchangeably depending on the context and medical specialty. |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
2 |
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Associated with |
Device |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
3 |
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Due to |
Procedure |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
1 |
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Due to |
Coronary artery bypass graft |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
2 |
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
After |
Coronary artery bypass graft |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
1 |
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Due to |
A surgical technique in which tissues, cells, or synthetic material, commonly from the same person, another individual, or an animal, are transferred to a recipient site. Grafts of skin and tissue fragments that are completely detached from their original source typically lack their own intrinsic blood supply and rely on the recipient site for vascular perfusion and survival. While solid organs are almost exclusively transplanted and skin and tissues are generally grafted, the terms graft and transplant are sometimes used interchangeably depending on the context and medical specialty. |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
4 |
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Is a |
Mechanical complication of cardiovascular device |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
|
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Is a |
Bypass graft mechanical complications |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
|
|
Mechanical complication due to coronary bypass graft |
Associated morphology |
Vascular graft |
false |
Inferred relationship |
Some |
3 |
|