endogenous depression
mental depression that is characterized by a dysregulation of the endogenous opioid system and not of the monaminergic system
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
endogenous depression
Summary
endogenous depression is a class of disease[1]. It draws 13 Wikipedia views per month (class_of_disease category, ranking #619 of 1,968).[2]
Key Facts
- endogenous depression's instance of is recorded as class of disease[3].
- endogenous depression's subclass of is recorded as major depressive disorder[4].
- endogenous depression's subclass of is recorded as endogenous mental disorder[5].
- endogenous depression's OMIM ID is recorded as 608516[6].
- endogenous depression's ICD-9 ID is recorded as 296.19[7].
- endogenous depression's ICD-10 ID is recorded as F33.2[8].
- endogenous depression's ICD-10 ID is recorded as F33.3[9].
- endogenous depression's Disease Ontology ID is recorded as DOID:1595[10].
- endogenous depression's NCI Thesaurus ID is recorded as C34532[11].
- endogenous depression's NCI Thesaurus ID is recorded as C35094[12].
- endogenous depression's health specialty is recorded as psychiatry[13].
- endogenous depression's exact match is recorded as http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/DOID_1595[14].
- endogenous depression's exact match is recorded as http://identifiers.org/doid/DOID:1595[15].
- endogenous depression's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0011573[16].
- endogenous depression's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0041696[17].
- endogenous depression's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Medicine[18].
- endogenous depression's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Psychiatry[19].
- endogenous depression's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Psychology[20].
- endogenous depression's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 49467328[21].
- endogenous depression's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C49467328[22].
Why It Matters
endogenous depression draws 13 Wikipedia views per month (class_of_disease category, ranking #619 of 1,968).[2]