subthalamic nucleus
0 sources
subthalamic nucleus
Summary
subthalamic nucleus is a chiral organism subdivision type[1]. It draws 95 Wikipedia views per month (chiral_organism_subdivision_type category, ranking #9 of 22).[2]
Key Facts
- subthalamic nucleus is credited with the discovery of Jules Bernard Luys[3].
- subthalamic nucleus's instance of is recorded as chiral organism subdivision type[4].
- subthalamic nucleus's instance of is recorded as class of anatomical entity[5].
- Jules Bernard Luys is named after subthalamic nucleus[6].
- subthalamic nucleus's subclass of is recorded as neural nucleus[7].
- subthalamic nucleus's subclass of is recorded as Nucleus of subthalamus[8].
- subthalamic nucleus's part of is recorded as subthalamus[9].
- subthalamic nucleus's Commons category is recorded as Subthalamic nucleus[10].
- subthalamic nucleus's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as D020531[11].
- subthalamic nucleus's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04lylw[12].
- subthalamic nucleus's MeSH tree code is recorded as A08.186.211.200.317.800.800[13].
- subthalamic nucleus's Interlex ID is recorded as nlx_anat_1010002[14].
- subthalamic nucleus's Terminologia Anatomica 98 ID is recorded as A14.1.08.702[15].
- subthalamic nucleus's Foundational Model of Anatomy ID is recorded as 62035[16].
- subthalamic nucleus's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as science/subthalamic-nucleus[17].
- subthalamic nucleus's UBERON ID is recorded as 0001906[18].
- subthalamic nucleus's NCI Thesaurus ID is recorded as C12454[19].
- subthalamic nucleus's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0152355[20].
- subthalamic nucleus's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as subthalamic-nucleus[21].
- subthalamic nucleus's TA98 Latin term is recorded as nucleus subthalamicus[22].
- subthalamic nucleus's NeuroNames ID is recorded as 435[23].
- subthalamic nucleus's BrainInfo ID is recorded as 418[24].
- subthalamic nucleus's Xenopus Anatomical Ontology ID is recorded as XAO_0004589[25].
- subthalamic nucleus's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2777319143[26].
- subthalamic nucleus's TA2 ID is recorded as 5709[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
subthalamic nucleus is credited with the discovery of Jules Bernard Luys[3].
Why It Matters
subthalamic nucleus draws 95 Wikipedia views per month (chiral_organism_subdivision_type category, ranking #9 of 22).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 13 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]