DiseaseID 2181

天花

disease

MSH2017_2016_08_12:An acute, highly contagious, often fatal infectious disease caused by an orthopoxvirus characterized by a biphasic febrile course and distinctive progressive skin eruptions. Vaccination has succeeded i

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Relationship Network

Interactive first-hop connections across herbs, ingredients, formulas, targets, diseases, symptoms, syndromes, evidence, and monographs.

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Disease: 1Symptom: 10Target: 12Links: 22
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Record Fields

Scalar fields from the final disease record.

Disease Id
2181
Core Entity Id
2454
Source Entity Count
1
Preferred Name
Smallpox
Name Cn
天花
Name Pinyin
Tian Hua
Name En
Smallpox
Name Latin
Bilingual Status
complete
Disease Type
disease
Umls Disease Type
Disease or Syndrome
Disgenet Type
disease
Mesh Class
InfectionsSkin and Connective Tissue Diseases; Infections
Do Class
disease of anatomical entity; disease by infectious agent
Hpo Class
Mesh Class Name
Infections
Hpo Class Name
Do Class Name
disease of anatomical entity; disease by infectious agent
Disease Definition
MSH2017_2016_08_12:An acute, highly contagious, often fatal infectious disease caused by an orthopoxvirus characterized by a biphasic febrile course and distinctive progressive skin eruptions. Vaccination has succeeded in eradicating smallpox worldwide. (Dorland, 28th ed)|MEDLINEPLUS_20151021:<p>Smallpox is a disease caused by the Variola major virus. Some experts say that over the centuries it has killed more people than all other infectious diseases combined. Worldwide immunization stopped the spread of smallpox three decades ago. The last case was reported in 1977. Two research labs still keep small amounts of the virus. Experts fear <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/biodefenseandbioterrorism.html'>bioterrorists</a> could use the virus to spread disease.</p> <p>Smallpox spreads very easily from person to person. Symptoms are flu-like. They include</p> <ul> <li>High fever</li> <li>Fatigue</li> <li>Headache</li> <li>Backache</li> <li>A rash with flat red sores</li> </ul> <p>There is no treatment. Fluids and medicines for pain or fever can help control symptoms. Most people recover, but some can die. Those who do recover may have severe scars.</p> <p>The U.S. stopped routine smallpox vaccinations in 1972. Military and other high-risk groups continue to get the vaccine. The U.S. has increased its supply of the vaccine in recent years. The vaccine makes some people sick, so doctors save it for those at highest risk of disease. </p> <p >NIH: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases</p>
Version
v2
Suppressed
No

Names

Preferred names, aliases, and source labels retained in the final schema.

Name
Smallpox
Role
preferred
Name
Variola Major
Role
preferred
Name
Variola Minor
Role
alias

Cross References

Trusted external identifiers retained for this final record.

Herb
HBDIS002780HBDIS028756
Me Sh
D012899
Umls
C0037354C1812609
Icd10
B03
Sym Map
SMDE13249SMDE14207
Do Class
DOID:0050117DOID:7
Dis Ge Net
C0037354C1812609
Umls Sty
T047
Me Sh Class
C01C17
Tcmbank Disease
8067
Itcmdb Generated
ITX-DISEASE-5313574B30E5

Attributes

Merged source attributes and domain-specific metadata.

Version
v2
Suppress
0
Do Class Name
disease of anatomical entity; disease by infectious agent
Disease Type
disease
Do Disease Class
disease of anatomical entity; disease by infectious agent
Umls Disease Type
Disease or Syndrome
Disease Definition
MSH2017_2016_08_12:An acute, highly contagious, often fatal infectious disease caused by an orthopoxvirus characterized by a biphasic febrile course and distinctive progressive skin eruptions. Vaccination has succeeded in eradicating smallpox worldwide. (Dorland, 28th ed)|MEDLINEPLUS_20151021:<p>Smallpox is a disease caused by the Variola major virus. Some experts say that over the centuries it has killed more people than all other infectious diseases combined. Worldwide immunization stopped the spread of smallpox three decades ago. The last case was reported in 1977. Two research labs still keep small amounts of the virus. Experts fear <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/biodefenseandbioterrorism.html'>bioterrorists</a> could use the virus to spread disease.</p> <p>Smallpox spreads very easily from person to person. Symptoms are flu-like. They include</p> <ul> <li>High fever</li> <li>Fatigue</li> <li>Headache</li> <li>Backache</li> <li>A rash with flat red sores</li> </ul> <p>There is no treatment. Fluids and medicines for pain or fever can help control symptoms. Most people recover, but some can die. Those who do recover may have severe scars.</p> <p>The U.S. stopped routine smallpox vaccinations in 1972. Military and other high-risk groups continue to get the vaccine. The U.S. has increased its supply of the vaccine in recent years. The vaccine makes some people sick, so doctors save it for those at highest risk of disease. </p> <p >NIH: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases</p>
Me Sh Disease Class
InfectionsSkin and Connective Tissue Diseases; Infections
Dis Ge Net Disease Type
disease
Disease Class Name Me Sh
Infections
Umls Semantic Type Name
Disease or Syndrome