DiseaseID 4119
生长障碍
group
MSH2017_2016_08_12:Deviations from the average values for a specific age and sex in any or all of the following: height, weight, skeletal proportions, osseous development, or maturation of features. Included here are bot
Relationship Network
Interactive first-hop connections across herbs, ingredients, formulas, targets, diseases, symptoms, syndromes, evidence, and monographs.
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Disease: 1Symptom: 12Target: 12Links: 24
Arranging relationship network...
Record Fields
Scalar fields from the final disease record.
- Disease Id
- 4119
- Core Entity Id
- 60417
- Source Entity Count
- 2
- Preferred Name
- Growth Disorders
- Name Cn
- 生长障碍
- Name Pinyin
- Sheng Zhang Zhang Ai
- Name En
- Growth Disorders
- Name Latin
- Bilingual Status
- complete
- Disease Type
- group
- Umls Disease Type
- Pathologic Function
- Disgenet Type
- group
- Mesh Class
- Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms
- Do Class
- Hpo Class
- Mesh Class Name
- Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms
- Hpo Class Name
- Do Class Name
- Disease Definition
- MSH2017_2016_08_12:Deviations from the average values for a specific age and sex in any or all of the following: height, weight, skeletal proportions, osseous development, or maturation of features. Included here are both acceleration and retardation of growth.|MEDLINEPLUS_20151021:<p>Does your child seem much shorter - or much taller - than other kids his or her age? It could be normal. Some children may be small for their age but still be developing normally. Some children are short or tall because their parents are.</p> <p>But some children have growth disorders. Growth disorders are problems that prevent children from developing normal height, weight, sexual maturity or other features.</p> <p>Very slow or very fast growth can sometimes signal a <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/pituitarydisorders.html'>gland problem</a> or disease.</p> <p>The pituitary gland makes growth hormone, which stimulates the growth of bone and other tissues. Children who have too little of it may be very short. Treatment with growth hormone can stimulate growth.</p> <p>People can also have too much growth hormone. Usually the cause is a pituitary gland tumor, which is not cancer. Too much growth hormone can cause gigantism in children, where their bones and their body grow too much. In adults, it can cause acromegaly, which makes the hands, feet and face larger than normal. Possible treatments include surgery to remove the tumor, medicines, and radiation therapy.</p>
- Version
- v2
- Suppressed
- No
Names
Preferred names, aliases, and source labels retained in the final schema.
Name
Growth Disorders
Role
preferred
Cross References
Trusted external identifiers retained for this final record.
Herb
HBDIS001227
Me Sh
D006130
Umls
C0018273
Sym Map
SMDE09160
Dis Ge Net
C0018273
Umls Sty
T046
Me Sh Class
C23
Tcmbank Disease
314713365
Itcmdb Generated
ITX-DISEASE-5AE54D77A2AF
Attributes
Merged source attributes and domain-specific metadata.
Version
v2
Suppress
0
Disease Type
group
Umls Disease Type
Pathologic Function
Disease Definition
MSH2017_2016_08_12:Deviations from the average values for a specific age and sex in any or all of the following: height, weight, skeletal proportions, osseous development, or maturation of features. Included here are both acceleration and retardation of growth.|MEDLINEPLUS_20151021:<p>Does your child seem much shorter - or much taller - than other kids his or her age? It could be normal. Some children may be small for their age but still be developing normally. Some children are short or tall because their parents are.</p> <p>But some children have growth disorders. Growth disorders are problems that prevent children from developing normal height, weight, sexual maturity or other features.</p> <p>Very slow or very fast growth can sometimes signal a <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/pituitarydisorders.html'>gland problem</a> or disease.</p> <p>The pituitary gland makes growth hormone, which stimulates the growth of bone and other tissues. Children who have too little of it may be very short. Treatment with growth hormone can stimulate growth.</p> <p>People can also have too much growth hormone. Usually the cause is a pituitary gland tumor, which is not cancer. Too much growth hormone can cause gigantism in children, where their bones and their body grow too much. In adults, it can cause acromegaly, which makes the hands, feet and face larger than normal. Possible treatments include surgery to remove the tumor, medicines, and radiation therapy.</p>
Me Sh Disease Class
Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms
Dis Ge Net Disease Type
group
Disease Class Name Me Sh
Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms
Umls Semantic Type Name
Pathologic Function