DiseaseID 3416

细菌感染

group

NCI2016_02D:An acute infectious disorder caused by gram positive or gram negative bacteria. Representative examples include pneumococcal, streptococcal, salmonella and meningeal infections.|MSH2017_2016_08_12:Infections

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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: 1Experiment: 3Symptom: 12Target: 12Links: 27
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Record Fields

Scalar fields from the final disease record.

Disease Id
3416
Core Entity Id
59621
Source Entity Count
2
Preferred Name
Bacterial Infections
Name Cn
细菌感染
Name Pinyin
Xi Jun Gan Ran
Name En
Bacterial Infections
Name Latin
Bilingual Status
complete
Disease Type
group
Umls Disease Type
Disease or Syndrome
Disgenet Type
group
Mesh Class
Infections
Do Class
disease by infectious agent
Hpo Class
Mesh Class Name
Infections
Hpo Class Name
Do Class Name
disease by infectious agent
Disease Definition
NCI2016_02D:An acute infectious disorder caused by gram positive or gram negative bacteria. Representative examples include pneumococcal, streptococcal, salmonella and meningeal infections.|MSH2017_2016_08_12:Infections by bacteria, general or unspecified.|MEDLINEPLUS_20151021:<p>Bacteria are living things that have only one cell. Under a microscope, they look like balls, rods, or spirals. They are so small that a line of 1,000 could fit across a pencil eraser. Most bacteria won't hurt you - less than 1 percent of the different types make people sick. Many are helpful. Some bacteria help to digest food, destroy disease-causing cells, and give the body needed vitamins. Bacteria are also used in making healthy foods like yogurt and cheese.</p> <p>But infectious bacteria can make you ill. They reproduce quickly in your body. Many give off chemicals called toxins, which can damage tissue and make you sick. Examples of bacteria that cause infections include <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/streptococcalinfections.html'>Streptococcus</a>, <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/staphylococcalinfections.html'>Staphylococcus</a>, and <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ecoliinfections.html'>E. coli</a>.</p> <p><a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/antibiotics.html'>Antibiotics</a> are the usual treatment. When you take antibiotics, follow the directions carefully. Each time you take antibiotics, you increase the chances that bacteria in your body will learn to resist them causing <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/antibioticresistance.html'>antibiotic resistance</a>. Later, you could get or spread an infection that those antibiotics cannot cure.</p> <p >NIH: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases</p>|CSP2006:infections and associated diseases caused by bacteria, general or unspecified.
Version
v2
Suppressed
No

Names

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

Name
Bacterial Infections
Role
preferred
Name
Bacterial Infection of Unspecified Site
Role
alias
Name
Bacterial Infection, Unspecified
Role
alias
Name
Bacterial Infectious Disease
Role
alias

Cross References

Trusted external identifiers retained for this final record.

Herb
HBDIS000295
Sym Map
SMDE06251
Do Class
DOID:0050117
Dis Ge Net
C0004623
Umls Sty
T047
Me Sh Class
C01
Tcmbank Disease
1117432339
Itcmdb Generated
ITX-DISEASE-6BBED369283B

Attributes

Merged source attributes and domain-specific metadata.

Version
v2
Suppress
0
Do Class Name
disease by infectious agent
Disease Type
group
Do Disease Class
disease by infectious agent
Umls Disease Type
Disease or Syndrome
Disease Definition
NCI2016_02D:An acute infectious disorder caused by gram positive or gram negative bacteria. Representative examples include pneumococcal, streptococcal, salmonella and meningeal infections.|MSH2017_2016_08_12:Infections by bacteria, general or unspecified.|MEDLINEPLUS_20151021:<p>Bacteria are living things that have only one cell. Under a microscope, they look like balls, rods, or spirals. They are so small that a line of 1,000 could fit across a pencil eraser. Most bacteria won't hurt you - less than 1 percent of the different types make people sick. Many are helpful. Some bacteria help to digest food, destroy disease-causing cells, and give the body needed vitamins. Bacteria are also used in making healthy foods like yogurt and cheese.</p> <p>But infectious bacteria can make you ill. They reproduce quickly in your body. Many give off chemicals called toxins, which can damage tissue and make you sick. Examples of bacteria that cause infections include <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/streptococcalinfections.html'>Streptococcus</a>, <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/staphylococcalinfections.html'>Staphylococcus</a>, and <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ecoliinfections.html'>E. coli</a>.</p> <p><a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/antibiotics.html'>Antibiotics</a> are the usual treatment. When you take antibiotics, follow the directions carefully. Each time you take antibiotics, you increase the chances that bacteria in your body will learn to resist them causing <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/antibioticresistance.html'>antibiotic resistance</a>. Later, you could get or spread an infection that those antibiotics cannot cure.</p> <p >NIH: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases</p>|CSP2006:infections and associated diseases caused by bacteria, general or unspecified.
Me Sh Disease Class
Infections
Dis Ge Net Disease Type
group
Disease Class Name Me Sh
Infections
Umls Semantic Type Name
Disease or Syndrome