DiseaseID 3894
脑软化
disease
NCI2016_02D:Localized atrophy of the brain parenchyma due to aging, hemorrhage, infarct, or inflammation.|MSH2017_2016_08_12:Softening or loss of brain tissue following CEREBRAL INFARCTION; cerebral ischemia (see BRAIN I
Relationship Network
Interactive first-hop connections across herbs, ingredients, formulas, targets, diseases, symptoms, syndromes, evidence, and monographs.
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Disease: 1Symptom: 1Target: 12Links: 13
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Record Fields
Scalar fields from the final disease record.
- Disease Id
- 3894
- Core Entity Id
- 60159
- Source Entity Count
- 1
- Preferred Name
- Encephalomalacia
- Name Cn
- 脑软化
- Name Pinyin
- Nao Ruan Hua
- Name En
- Encephalomalacia
- Name Latin
- Bilingual Status
- complete
- Disease Type
- disease
- Umls Disease Type
- Disease or Syndrome
- Disgenet Type
- disease
- Mesh Class
- Nervous System Diseases
- Do Class
- disease of anatomical entity
- Hpo Class
- Abnormality of the nervous system
- Mesh Class Name
- Nervous System Diseases
- Hpo Class Name
- Abnormality of the nervous system
- Do Class Name
- disease of anatomical entity
- Disease Definition
- NCI2016_02D:Localized atrophy of the brain parenchyma due to aging, hemorrhage, infarct, or inflammation.|MSH2017_2016_08_12:Softening or loss of brain tissue following CEREBRAL INFARCTION; cerebral ischemia (see BRAIN ISCHEMIA), infection, CRANIOCEREBRAL TRAUMA, or other injury. The term is often used during gross pathologic inspection to describe blurred cortical margins and decreased consistency of brain tissue following infarction. Multicystic encephalomalacia refers to the formation of multiple cystic cavities of various sizes in the cerebral cortex of neonates and infants following injury, most notably perinatal hypoxia-ischemic events. (From Davis et al., Textbook of Neuropathology, 2nd ed, p665; J Neuropathol Exp Neurol, 1995 Mar;54(2):268-75)|HPO2016_07_04:Encephalomalacia is the softening or loss of brain tissue after cerebral infarction, cerebral ischemia, infection, craniocerebral trauma, or other injury. [PhenoTips:CHum]
- Version
- v2
- Suppressed
- No
Names
Preferred names, aliases, and source labels retained in the final schema.
Name
Encephalomalacia
Role
preferred
Name
Multicystic Encephalomalacia
Role
preferred
Name
Cerebral Softening
Role
alias
Cross References
Trusted external identifiers retained for this final record.
Hpo
HP:0040197
Herb
HBDIS000915HBDIS008746
Me Sh
D004678
Umls
C0014068
Sym Map
SMDE08227
Do Class
DOID:7
Dis Ge Net
C0014068C0393992
Umls Sty
T047
Hpo Class
HP:0000707
Me Sh Class
C10
Tcmbank Disease
1730419099
Itcmdb Generated
ITX-DISEASE-D96CF0390677
Attributes
Merged source attributes and domain-specific metadata.
Version
v2
Suppress
0
Do Class Name
disease of anatomical entity
Disease Type
disease
Hpo Class Name
Abnormality of the nervous system
Do Disease Class
disease of anatomical entity
Hpo Disease Class
Abnormality of the nervous system
Umls Disease Type
Disease or Syndrome
Disease Definition
NCI2016_02D:Localized atrophy of the brain parenchyma due to aging, hemorrhage, infarct, or inflammation.|MSH2017_2016_08_12:Softening or loss of brain tissue following CEREBRAL INFARCTION; cerebral ischemia (see BRAIN ISCHEMIA), infection, CRANIOCEREBRAL TRAUMA, or other injury. The term is often used during gross pathologic inspection to describe blurred cortical margins and decreased consistency of brain tissue following infarction. Multicystic encephalomalacia refers to the formation of multiple cystic cavities of various sizes in the cerebral cortex of neonates and infants following injury, most notably perinatal hypoxia-ischemic events. (From Davis et al., Textbook of Neuropathology, 2nd ed, p665; J Neuropathol Exp Neurol, 1995 Mar;54(2):268-75)|HPO2016_07_04:Encephalomalacia is the softening or loss of brain tissue after cerebral infarction, cerebral ischemia, infection, craniocerebral trauma, or other injury. [PhenoTips:CHum]
Me Sh Disease Class
Nervous System Diseases
Dis Ge Net Disease Type
disease
Disease Class Name Me Sh
Nervous System Diseases
Umls Semantic Type Name
Disease or Syndrome