cyclosporiasis
0 sources
cyclosporiasis
Summary
cyclosporiasis is an infectious disease[1]. cyclosporiasis draws 34 Wikipedia views per month (infectious_disease category, ranking #179 of 279).[2]
Key Facts
- cyclosporiasis's instance of is recorded as infectious disease[3].
- cyclosporiasis's instance of is recorded as class of disease[4].
- cyclosporiasis's subclass of is recorded as coccidiosis[5].
- cyclosporiasis's subclass of is recorded as cyclospora infection[6].
- cyclosporiasis's subclass of is recorded as waterborne disease[7].
- cyclosporiasis's subclass of is recorded as disease[8].
- cyclosporiasis's Commons category is recorded as Cyclosporiasis[9].
- cyclosporiasis's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as D021866[10].
- cyclosporiasis's DiseasesDB is recorded as 32228[11].
- cyclosporiasis's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/07z2b5[12].
- cyclosporiasis's MeSH tree code is recorded as C01.610.752.250.280[13].
- cyclosporiasis's eMedicine ID is recorded as 996978[14].
- cyclosporiasis's Disease Ontology ID is recorded as DOID:12750[15].
- cyclosporiasis's symptoms and signs is recorded as influenza-like illness[16].
- cyclosporiasis's symptoms and signs is recorded as diarrhea[17].
- cyclosporiasis's symptoms and signs is recorded as abdominal pain[18].
- cyclosporiasis's symptoms and signs is recorded as flatulence[19].
- cyclosporiasis's symptoms and signs is recorded as dehydration[20].
- cyclosporiasis's symptoms and signs is recorded as nausea[21].
- cyclosporiasis's symptoms and signs is recorded as vomiting[22].
- cyclosporiasis's has cause is recorded as Cyclospora cayetanensis[23].
- cyclosporiasis's medical examination is recorded as stool test[24].
- cyclosporiasis's medical examination is recorded as polymerase chain reaction[25].
- cyclosporiasis's disease transmission process is recorded as fecal–oral route[26].
- cyclosporiasis's Patientplus ID is recorded as cyclosporiasis[27].
Why It Matters
cyclosporiasis draws 34 Wikipedia views per month (infectious_disease category, ranking #179 of 279).[2] cyclosporiasis has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]