DiseaseID 4226
多毛症
disease
NCI2016_NICHD_1602D:Excessive hair growth anywhere on the body.|NCI2016_CTCAE_1602D:A disorder characterized by hair density or length beyond the accepted limits of normal in a particular body region, for a particular ag
Relationship Network
Interactive first-hop connections across herbs, ingredients, formulas, targets, diseases, symptoms, syndromes, evidence, and monographs.
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Disease: 1Symptom: 2Target: 12Links: 14
Arranging relationship network...
Record Fields
Scalar fields from the final disease record.
- Disease Id
- 4226
- Core Entity Id
- 60543
- Source Entity Count
- 2
- Preferred Name
- Hirsutism
- Name Cn
- 多毛症
- Name Pinyin
- Duo Mao Zheng
- Name En
- Hirsutism
- Name Latin
- Bilingual Status
- complete
- Disease Type
- disease
- Umls Disease Type
- Disease or Syndrome
- Disgenet Type
- disease
- Mesh Class
- Skin and Connective Tissue DiseasesSkin and Connective Tissue Diseases; Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms
- Do Class
- disease of anatomical entity
- Hpo Class
- Abnormality of the integument
- Mesh Class Name
- Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms; Skin and Connective Tissue DiseasesSkin and Connective Tissue Diseases
- Hpo Class Name
- Abnormality of the integument
- Do Class Name
- disease of anatomical entity
- Disease Definition
- NCI2016_NICHD_1602D:Excessive hair growth anywhere on the body.|NCI2016_CTCAE_1602D:A disorder characterized by hair density or length beyond the accepted limits of normal in a particular body region, for a particular age or race.|NCI2016_02D:Excessive hair growth anywhere on the body.|MSH2017_2016_08_12:Excessive hair growth at inappropriate locations, such as on the extremities, the head, and the back. It is caused by genetic or acquired factors, and is an androgen-independent process. This concept does not include HIRSUTISM which is an androgen-dependent excess hair growth in WOMEN and CHILDREN.|HPO2016_07_04:Hypertrichosis is increased hair growth that is abnormal in quantity or location. [HPO:probinson]
- Version
- v2
- Suppressed
- No
Names
Preferred names, aliases, and source labels retained in the final schema.
Name
Hirsutism
Role
preferred
Name
Hypertrichosis
Role
preferred
Name
Excessive Hair Growth
Role
alias
Name
Excessive Hairiness
Role
alias
Name
Hypertrichosis, Unspecified
Role
alias
Name
Polytrichia
Role
alias
Cross References
Trusted external identifiers retained for this final record.
Hpo
HP:0000998HP:0001007
Herb
HBDIS001378HBDIS001472
Me Sh
D006628D006983
Umls
C0020555
Icd10
L68L68.0L68.3L68.9
Sym Map
SMDE09665
Do Class
DOID:7
Dis Ge Net
C0019572C0020555
Umls Sty
T033T047
Hpo Class
HP:0001574
Me Sh Class
C17C23
Tcmbank Disease
15133208132706631231
Itcmdb Generated
ITX-DISEASE-513E3CD2133EITX-DISEASE-61D2FB7F4614
Attributes
Merged source attributes and domain-specific metadata.
Version
v2
Suppress
0
Do Class Name
disease of anatomical entity
Disease Type
diseasephenotype
Hpo Class Name
Abnormality of the integument
Do Disease Class
disease of anatomical entity
Hpo Disease Class
Abnormality of the integument
Umls Disease Type
Disease or SyndromeFinding
Disease Definition
NCI2016_NICHD_1602D:Excessive hair growth anywhere on the body.|NCI2016_CTCAE_1602D:A disorder characterized by hair density or length beyond the accepted limits of normal in a particular body region, for a particular age or race.|NCI2016_02D:Excessive hair growth anywhere on the body.|MSH2017_2016_08_12:Excessive hair growth at inappropriate locations, such as on the extremities, the head, and the back. It is caused by genetic or acquired factors, and is an androgen-independent process. This concept does not include HIRSUTISM which is an androgen-dependent excess hair growth in WOMEN and CHILDREN.|HPO2016_07_04:Hypertrichosis is increased hair growth that is abnormal in quantity or location. [HPO:probinson]
Me Sh Disease Class
Skin and Connective Tissue DiseasesSkin and Connective Tissue Diseases; Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms
Dis Ge Net Disease Type
diseasephenotype
Disease Class Name Me Sh
Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms; Skin and Connective Tissue DiseasesSkin and Connective Tissue Diseases
Umls Semantic Type Name
Disease or SyndromeFinding