adult polyglucosan body disease
Adult polyglucosan body disease (APBD) is a glycogen storage disease of adults characterized by progressive upper and lower motor neuron dysfunction, progressive neurogenic bladder and cognitive difficulties that can lead to dementia
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adult polyglucosan body disease
Summary
adult polyglucosan body disease is a rare disease[1]. It draws 5 Wikipedia views per month (rare_disease category, ranking #234 of 627).[2]
Key Facts
- adult polyglucosan body disease's instance of is recorded as rare disease[3].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's instance of is recorded as class of disease[4].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's subclass of is recorded as glycogen storage disease[5].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's subclass of is recorded as rare hereditary metabolic disease with peripheral neuropathy[6].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's Commons category is recorded as Adult polyglucosan body disease[7].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as C564878[8].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's OMIM ID is recorded as 263570[9].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's DiseasesDB is recorded as 34718[10].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's Orphanet ID is recorded as 206583[11].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's health specialty is recorded as medical genetics[12].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's genetic association is recorded as GBE1[13].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's UMLS CUI is recorded as C1849722[14].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's ICD-10-CM is recorded as E74.0, 74.09[15].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's GARD rare disease ID is recorded as 108[16].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's Mondo ID is recorded as MONDO_0009897[17].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's Genetics Home Reference Conditions ID is recorded as adult-polyglucosan-body-disease[18].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's WikiProjectMed ID is recorded as Adult polyglucosan body disease[19].
- adult polyglucosan body disease's UniProt disease ID is recorded as DI-00052[20].
Why It Matters
adult polyglucosan body disease draws 5 Wikipedia views per month (rare_disease category, ranking #234 of 627).[2]