spondylosis
0 sources
spondylosis
Summary
spondylosis is a class of disease[1]. spondylosis draws 350 Wikipedia views per month (class_of_disease category, ranking #388 of 1,968).[2]
Key Facts
- spondylosis's image is recorded as Lateral X-ray of lumbar spine spondylosis.jpg[3].
- spondylosis's instance of is recorded as class of disease[4].
- spondylosis's subclass of is recorded as bone structure disease[5].
- spondylosis's subclass of is recorded as spondylosis and allied disorder[6].
- spondylosis's subclass of is recorded as disease[7].
- spondylosis's Commons category is recorded as Spondylosis[8].
- spondylosis's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as D055009[9].
- spondylosis's OMIM ID is recorded as 184300[10].
- spondylosis's ICD-10 ID is recorded as M47[11].
- spondylosis's DiseasesDB is recorded as 12323[12].
- spondylosis's MedlinePlus ID is recorded as 000436[13].
- spondylosis's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03znv2[14].
- spondylosis's MeSH tree code is recorded as C05.116.900.938[15].
- spondylosis's eMedicine ID is recorded as 1144952[16].
- spondylosis's Disease Ontology ID is recorded as DOID:2247[17].
- spondylosis's Gran Enciclopèdia Catalana ID is recorded as 0105841[18].
- spondylosis's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as science/cervical-spondylosis[19].
- spondylosis's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as science/spondylosis[20].
- spondylosis's Patientplus ID is recorded as cervical-spondylosis-pro[21].
- spondylosis's ICD-9-CM is recorded as 721.9[22].
- spondylosis's ICD-9-CM is recorded as 721.3[23].
- spondylosis's different from is recorded as spondylolysis[24].
- spondylosis's health specialty is recorded as orthopedics[25].
- spondylosis's exact match is recorded as http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/DOID_2247[26].
- spondylosis's exact match is recorded as http://identifiers.org/doid/DOID:2247[27].
Why It Matters
spondylosis draws 350 Wikipedia views per month (class_of_disease category, ranking #388 of 1,968).[2] spondylosis has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] spondylosis is known by 35 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]