AutoICD API

1A7Z

Gonococcal infection, unspecified

Gonococcal infection, unspecified

Classification

ICD-11

Parent Code

BlockL2-1A7

ICD-10 Mapping

3 equivalents
ICD-10 Equivalents(3)
Also Known As / Clinical Terms(10)
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the ICD-11 code for gonococcal infection, unspecified?

The ICD-11 code for gonococcal infection, unspecified is 1A7Z. The full clinical description is "Gonococcal infection, unspecified".

What does ICD-11 code 1A7Z mean?

ICD-11 code 1A7Z represents “Gonococcal infection, unspecified”. It is classified under Chapter 1: Certain Infectious or Parasitic Diseases.

What chapter is 1A7Z in?

1A7Z is in Chapter 1: Certain Infectious or Parasitic Diseases (codes 1A00-1H0Z).

What is the ICD-10 equivalent of ICD-11 code 1A7Z?

1A7Z maps to 3 ICD-10 codes: A54 (Gonococcal infection), A54.6 (Gonococcal infection of anus and rectum), A54.9 (Gonococcal infection, unspecified). ICD-10 and ICD-11 do not always have one-to-one mappings — check the mapping type (equivalent, approximate, narrower, or broader) for each result.

What is the difference between ICD-10 and ICD-11?

ICD-11 is the latest revision of the WHO's International Classification of Diseases, succeeding ICD-10. Key differences include: a fully digital-first design, new chapters for sleep-wake disorders, sexual health, and traditional medicine, improved coding for rare diseases, and better integration with electronic health records through extension codes.

What SNOMED CT codes does 1A7Z map to?

1A7Z maps to 10 SNOMED CT concepts: 186931002, 1087001000119105, 1339030007, 42746002, 235764000, and 5 more. SNOMED CT is a clinical terminology used in electronic health records.

Automate Medical Coding With AI

Send clinical text to the AutoICD API and get back structured ICD-10 and ICD-11 codes with confidence scores. Integrates into any EHR or billing system in minutes.

Includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) used by permission of SNOMED International. Includes content from the UMLS Metathesaurus, courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.