amelia
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amelia
Summary
amelia is a developmental defect during embryogenesis[1]. amelia draws 175 Wikipedia views per month (developmental_defect_during_embryogenesis category, ranking #42 of 308).[2]
Key Facts
- amelia's instance of is recorded as developmental defect during embryogenesis[3].
- amelia's instance of is recorded as class of disease[4].
- amelia's subclass of is recorded as dysmelia[5].
- amelia's subclass of is recorded as ectromelia[6].
- amelia's subclass of is recorded as non-syndromic limb reduction defect[7].
- amelia's Commons category is recorded as Amelia (birth defect)[8].
- amelia's facet of is recorded as total absence of body part[9].
- amelia's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as science/amelia-medicine[10].
- amelia's Orphanet ID is recorded as 294925[11].
- amelia's NCI Thesaurus ID is recorded as C34370[12].
- amelia's health specialty is recorded as medical genetics[13].
- amelia's exact match is recorded as http://www.orpha.net/ORDO/Orphanet_294925[14].
- amelia's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0002447[15].
- amelia's GPnotebook ID is recorded as -711327694[16].
- amelia's Human Phenotype Ontology ID is recorded as HP:0009827[17].
- amelia's ICD-10-CM is recorded as Q73.0[18].
- amelia's Mondo ID is recorded as MONDO_0017419[19].
- amelia's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2910717608[20].
- amelia's Online PWN Encyclopedia ID is recorded as 3868589[21].
- amelia's WikiProjectMed ID is recorded as Amelia (birth defect)[22].
Why It Matters
amelia draws 175 Wikipedia views per month (developmental_defect_during_embryogenesis category, ranking #42 of 308).[2] amelia has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] amelia is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]