Ollier disease
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Ollier disease
Summary
Ollier disease is a class of disease[1]. It draws 35 Wikipedia views per month (class_of_disease category, ranking #602 of 1,968).[2]
Key Facts
- Ollier disease's instance of is recorded as class of disease[3].
- Ollier disease's subclass of is recorded as syndrome[4].
- Ollier disease's subclass of is recorded as enchondromatosis[5].
- Ollier disease's subclass of is recorded as disease[6].
- Ollier disease's Commons category is recorded as Ollier disease[7].
- Ollier disease's OMIM ID is recorded as 166000[8].
- Ollier disease's ICD-9 ID is recorded as 756.4[9].
- Ollier disease's DiseasesDB is recorded as 9212[10].
- Ollier disease's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0gw1s6[11].
- Ollier disease's Disease Ontology ID is recorded as DOID:4624[12].
- Ollier disease's symptoms and signs is recorded as Enchondroma[13].
- Ollier disease's symptoms and signs is recorded as enchondromatosis[14].
- Ollier disease's Orphanet ID is recorded as 296[15].
- Ollier disease's NCI Thesaurus ID is recorded as C3213[16].
- Ollier disease's health specialty is recorded as medical genetics[17].
- Ollier disease's BabelNet ID is recorded as 03548442n[18].
- Ollier disease's exact match is recorded as http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/DOID_4624[19].
- Ollier disease's exact match is recorded as http://identifiers.org/doid/DOID:4624[20].
- Ollier disease's exact match is recorded as http://www.orpha.net/ORDO/Orphanet_296[21].
- Ollier disease's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0024454[22].
- Ollier disease's ICD-10-CM is recorded as Q78.4[23].
- Ollier disease's GARD rare disease ID is recorded as 7251[24].
- Ollier disease's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Medicine[25].
- Ollier disease's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2779131858[26].
- Ollier disease's WikiProjectMed ID is recorded as Ollier disease[27].
Why It Matters
Ollier disease draws 35 Wikipedia views per month (class_of_disease category, ranking #602 of 1,968).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]