DiseaseID 27108
牙槽骨炎
Alveolar Osteitis
MSH2017_2016_08_12:A condition sometimes occurring after tooth extraction, particularly after traumatic extraction, resulting in a dry appearance of the exposed bone in the socket, due to disintegration or loss of the bl
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: 3Target: 12Links: 15
Arranging relationship network...
Record Fields
Scalar fields from the final disease record.
- Disease Id
- 27108
- Core Entity Id
- 119676
- Source Entity Count
- 1
- Preferred Name
- Alveolar Osteitis
- Name Cn
- 牙槽骨炎
- Name Pinyin
- Ya Cao Gu Yan
- Name En
- Alveolar Osteitis
- 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
- MSH2017_2016_08_12:A condition sometimes occurring after tooth extraction, particularly after traumatic extraction, resulting in a dry appearance of the exposed bone in the socket, due to disintegration or loss of the blood clot. It is basically a focal osteomyelitis without suppuration and is accompanied by severe pain (alveolalgia) and foul odor. (Dorland, 28th ed)
- Version
- v2
- Suppressed
- No
Names
Preferred names, aliases, and source labels retained in the final schema.
Name
Alveolar Osteitis
Role
preferred
Cross References
Trusted external identifiers retained for this final record.
Me Sh
D004368
Umls
C0013240
Icd10
M27.3
Sym Map
SMDE05745
Itcmdb Generated
ITX-DISEASE-A4D041F5BDC4
Attributes
Merged source attributes and domain-specific metadata.
Version
v2
Suppress
0
Disease Definition
MSH2017_2016_08_12:A condition sometimes occurring after tooth extraction, particularly after traumatic extraction, resulting in a dry appearance of the exposed bone in the socket, due to disintegration or loss of the blood clot. It is basically a focal osteomyelitis without suppuration and is accompanied by severe pain (alveolalgia) and foul odor. (Dorland, 28th ed)