DiseaseID 22226
IgG缺乏症
Igg Deficiency
NCI2016_02D:A classification of dysgammaglobulinemias characterized by low or undetectable serum levels of one of the four immunoglobulin class G (IgG) subclasses. Selective IgG1 deficiency is rare and primarily decrease
Relationship Network
Interactive first-hop connections across herbs, ingredients, formulas, targets, diseases, symptoms, syndromes, evidence, and monographs.
Click a node to open it in a new tab
Disease: 1Symptom: 1Target: 12Links: 13
Arranging relationship network...
Record Fields
Scalar fields from the final disease record.
- Disease Id
- 22226
- Core Entity Id
- 103512
- Source Entity Count
- 1
- Preferred Name
- Igg Deficiency
- Name Cn
- IgG缺乏症
- Name Pinyin
- Igg Que Fa Zheng
- Name En
- Igg Deficiency
- Name Latin
- Bilingual Status
- complete
- Disease Type
- Umls Disease Type
- Disgenet Type
- Mesh Class
- Do Class
- Hpo Class
- Mesh Class Name
- Hpo Class Name
- Do Class Name
- Disease Definition
- NCI2016_02D:A classification of dysgammaglobulinemias characterized by low or undetectable serum levels of one of the four immunoglobulin class G (IgG) subclasses. Selective IgG1 deficiency is rare and primarily decreases the immune response to bacterial protein antigens. Selective IgG2 deficiency is the most common subclass deficiency among children and primarily leads to an inadequate response to bacterial polysaccharide antigens. Selective IgG3 deficiency is the most common subclass deficiency among adults and also primarily lowers the response to bacterial proteins. Selective IgG4 deficiency may be a clinically insignificant developmental variant, as IgG4 is a subclass that is virtually undetectable until the end of the first decade of life. Low levels of any IgG subclass will reduce the immune system's effectiveness and thus the clinical presentation of these diseases is usually recurrent infection, particularly by encapsulated bacteria.|NCI2016_02D:A broad classification of dysgammaglobulinemias characterized by low or undetectable serum levels of immunoglobulin class G (IgG). Deficiencies of IgG present variably according to subclass. IgG deficiencies are typically relative among subclasses and not absolute. Thus even with a given selective IgG subclass deficiency, total IgG levels may still fall within normal range. The clinical course and prognosis is dependent upon the severity of the deficiency and associated morbidity.|MSH2017_2016_08_12:A dysgammaglobulinemia characterized by a deficiency of IMMUNOGLOBULIN G.|HPO2016_07_04:An abnormally decreased level of immunoglobulin IgG in blood. [HPO:probinson]
- Version
- v2
- Suppressed
- No
Names
Preferred names, aliases, and source labels retained in the final schema.
Name
Igg Deficiency
Role
preferred
Cross References
Trusted external identifiers retained for this final record.
Umls
C0162539
Sym Map
SMDE09773
Tcmbank Disease
1789
Itcmdb Generated
ITX-DISEASE-374BF91EAD78
Attributes
Merged source attributes and domain-specific metadata.
Version
v2
Suppress
0
Disease Definition
NCI2016_02D:A classification of dysgammaglobulinemias characterized by low or undetectable serum levels of one of the four immunoglobulin class G (IgG) subclasses. Selective IgG1 deficiency is rare and primarily decreases the immune response to bacterial protein antigens. Selective IgG2 deficiency is the most common subclass deficiency among children and primarily leads to an inadequate response to bacterial polysaccharide antigens. Selective IgG3 deficiency is the most common subclass deficiency among adults and also primarily lowers the response to bacterial proteins. Selective IgG4 deficiency may be a clinically insignificant developmental variant, as IgG4 is a subclass that is virtually undetectable until the end of the first decade of life. Low levels of any IgG subclass will reduce the immune system's effectiveness and thus the clinical presentation of these diseases is usually recurrent infection, particularly by encapsulated bacteria.|NCI2016_02D:A broad classification of dysgammaglobulinemias characterized by low or undetectable serum levels of immunoglobulin class G (IgG). Deficiencies of IgG present variably according to subclass. IgG deficiencies are typically relative among subclasses and not absolute. Thus even with a given selective IgG subclass deficiency, total IgG levels may still fall within normal range. The clinical course and prognosis is dependent upon the severity of the deficiency and associated morbidity.|MSH2017_2016_08_12:A dysgammaglobulinemia characterized by a deficiency of IMMUNOGLOBULIN G.|HPO2016_07_04:An abnormally decreased level of immunoglobulin IgG in blood. [HPO:probinson]