expressive language disorder
neurodevelopmental condition
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
expressive language disorder
Summary
expressive language disorder is a class of disease[1]. It draws 61 Wikipedia views per month (class_of_disease category, ranking #585 of 1,968).[2]
Key Facts
- expressive language disorder's instance of is recorded as class of disease[3].
- expressive language disorder's subclass of is recorded as language disorder[4].
- expressive language disorder's subclass of is recorded as specific language impairment-5[5].
- expressive language disorder's MedlinePlus ID is recorded as 001544[6].
- expressive language disorder's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03jdzs[7].
- expressive language disorder's Disease Ontology ID is recorded as DOID:11385[8].
- expressive language disorder's ICD-9-CM is recorded as 315.31[9].
- expressive language disorder's NCI Thesaurus ID is recorded as C92562[10].
- expressive language disorder's health specialty is recorded as psychiatry[11].
- expressive language disorder's BabelNet ID is recorded as 03748199n[12].
- expressive language disorder's exact match is recorded as http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/DOID_11385[13].
- expressive language disorder's exact match is recorded as http://identifiers.org/doid/DOID:11385[14].
- expressive language disorder's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0236826[15].
- expressive language disorder's Quora topic ID is recorded as Expressive-Language-Disorder-1[16].
- expressive language disorder's ICD-10-CM is recorded as F80.1[17].
- expressive language disorder's PatientsLikeMe condition ID is recorded as expressive-language-disorder[18].
- expressive language disorder's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Medicine[19].
- expressive language disorder's Mondo ID is recorded as MONDO_0001276[20].
- expressive language disorder's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2779172666[21].
Why It Matters
expressive language disorder draws 61 Wikipedia views per month (class_of_disease category, ranking #585 of 1,968).[2]