vestibular duct
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vestibular duct
Summary
vestibular duct is a chiral organism subdivision type[1]. It draws 10 Wikipedia views per month (chiral_organism_subdivision_type category, ranking #18 of 22).[2]
Key Facts
- vestibular duct's image is recorded as Gray923.png[3].
- vestibular duct's instance of is recorded as chiral organism subdivision type[4].
- vestibular duct's instance of is recorded as class of anatomical entity[5].
- vestibular duct's subclass of is recorded as subdivision of cochlea[6].
- vestibular duct's part of is recorded as cochlea[7].
- vestibular duct's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as D054738[8].
- vestibular duct's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/099jlx[9].
- vestibular duct's MeSH tree code is recorded as A09.246.300.246.874[10].
- vestibular duct's anatomical location is recorded as cochlea[11].
- vestibular duct's Terminologia Anatomica 98 ID is recorded as A15.3.03.043[12].
- vestibular duct's described by source is recorded as Gray's Anatomy (20th edition)[13].
- vestibular duct's Foundational Model of Anatomy ID is recorded as 61269[14].
- vestibular duct's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as science/scala-vestibuli[15].
- vestibular duct's UBERON ID is recorded as 0001863[16].
- vestibular duct's BabelNet ID is recorded as 16802340n[17].
- vestibular duct's connects with is recorded as oval window[18].
- vestibular duct's connects with is recorded as tympanic duct[19].
- vestibular duct's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0229511[20].
- vestibular duct's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as scala-vestibuli[21].
- vestibular duct's TA98 Latin term is recorded as scala vestibuli[22].
- vestibular duct's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2777991104[23].
- vestibular duct's TA2 ID is recorded as 6968[24].
- vestibular duct's ScienceDirect topic ID is recorded as immunology-and-microbiology/scala-vestibuli[25].
- vestibular duct's ScienceDirect topic ID is recorded as medicine-and-dentistry/scala-vestibuli[26].
- vestibular duct's ScienceDirect topic ID is recorded as neuroscience/scala-vestibuli[27].
Why It Matters
vestibular duct draws 10 Wikipedia views per month (chiral_organism_subdivision_type category, ranking #18 of 22).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]