Hemihypertrophy
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Hemihypertrophy
Summary
Hemihypertrophy is a health problem[1]. Hemihypertrophy draws 41 Wikipedia views per month (health_problem category, ranking #76 of 128).[2]
Key Facts
- Hemihypertrophy's instance of is recorded as health problem[3].
- Hemihypertrophy's instance of is recorded as head and neck disease[4].
- Hemihypertrophy's instance of is recorded as developmental defect during embryogenesis[5].
- Hemihypertrophy's instance of is recorded as class of disease[6].
- Hemihypertrophy's subclass of is recorded as overgrowth syndrome[7].
- Hemihypertrophy's subclass of is recorded as macroglossia[8].
- Hemihypertrophy's subclass of is recorded as polymalformative genetic syndrome with increased risk of developing cancer[9].
- Hemihypertrophy's subclass of is recorded as rare genetic bone disease[10].
- Hemihypertrophy's Commons category is recorded as Hemihyperplasia[11].
- Hemihypertrophy's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as C565524[12].
- Hemihypertrophy's OMIM ID is recorded as 235000[13].
- Hemihypertrophy's Orphanet ID is recorded as 2128[14].
- Hemihypertrophy's NCI Thesaurus ID is recorded as C88541[15].
- Hemihypertrophy's UMLS CUI is recorded as C1856184[16].
- Hemihypertrophy's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0332890[17].
- Hemihypertrophy's UMLS CUI is recorded as C1856185[18].
- Hemihypertrophy's ICD-10-CM is recorded as Q87.3[19].
- Hemihypertrophy's PatientsLikeMe condition ID is recorded as hemihypertrophy[20].
- Hemihypertrophy's GARD rare disease ID is recorded as 12089[21].
- Hemihypertrophy's GARD rare disease ID is recorded as 2630[22].
- Hemihypertrophy's Mondo ID is recorded as MONDO_0009331[23].
- Hemihypertrophy's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2778088499[24].
- Hemihypertrophy's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2910142290[25].
- Hemihypertrophy's ICD-11 ID is recorded as 116353458[26].
- Hemihypertrophy's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C2778088499[27].
Why It Matters
Hemihypertrophy draws 41 Wikipedia views per month (health_problem category, ranking #76 of 128).[2] Hemihypertrophy has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Hemihypertrophy is known by 14 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]