544219
BN · Brand nameEd ChlorPed
Concept
RxCUI544219
NameEd ChlorPed
Term typeBN · Brand name
LanguageENG
SuppressO
Cross-maps
UMLS CUIC1589148
Synonyms
No additional synonyms recorded.
# same page, as API
GET autoicdapi.com/api/v1/reference/rxnorm/544219
GET autoicdapi.com/api/v1/translate?code=544219&from=rxnorm&to=umls
Common questions
What is the RxNorm code for Ed ChlorPed?
Ed ChlorPed is coded as 544219 in RxNorm.
What is RxNorm code 544219?
544219 is the RxNorm identifier for Ed ChlorPed. It is included in the current monthly NLM RxNorm release.
What term type is RxCUI 544219?
544219 is a BN (Brand name) in RxNorm.
What is the UMLS mapping for 544219?
544219 maps to UMLS C1589148.
RxNorm, plainly answered
What is RxNorm?
RxNorm is the NLM's normalized naming system for clinical drugs and dose forms. It collapses brand variants, packaging differences, and source-vocabulary noise into a single, stable identifier (RxCUI) per concept, with explicit links to ingredients, brands, and clinical drug forms.
What are RxCUIs?
An RxCUI is the persistent ID for a single RxNorm concept. The same RxCUI keeps pointing at the same drug concept release after release, even when names or sources change. That stability is what makes RxNorm useful for medication reconciliation and analytics.
How does RxNorm relate to NDC codes?
NDC codes describe a specific package SKU at a specific manufacturer. RxNorm describes the clinically relevant drug. One RxCUI can map to dozens of NDCs (different manufacturers, different package sizes), and we list those NDC mappings on each concept page.
How does RxNorm cross-map to other standards?
RxNorm concepts carry direct links to UMLS CUIs and SNOMED CT product codes when available. Through the UMLS bridge they can also reach ICD-10 codes (for instance, for indication-based coding) and LOINC observations. Our API exposes all of this on the cross_references field.
Is the API free to use?
Browsing concepts is free. Programmatic access at /api/v1/reference/rxnorm/* requires an API key. RxNorm itself is in the public domain, so there is no upstream license fee, but our bandwidth and uptime are not.
How fresh is the RxNorm data?
RxNorm releases monthly. We rebuild within a few business days of each release, and the concept-id history is preserved so previous lookups continue to resolve.