xenodiagnosis
method for diagnosing a disease in one organism by inoculating the putative causative organism in a second animal of a different species
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xenodiagnosis
Summary
xenodiagnosis is a laboratory diagnostics[1]. xenodiagnosis draws 9 Wikipedia views per month (laboratory_diagnostics category, ranking #6 of 7).[2]
Key Facts
- xenodiagnosis is credited with the discovery of Émile Brumpt[3].
- xenodiagnosis's instance of is recorded as laboratory diagnostics[4].
- xenodiagnosis's subclass of is recorded as diagnosis[5].
- xenodiagnosis's subclass of is recorded as microbiological technique[6].
- xenodiagnosis's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as D020525[7].
- xenodiagnosis's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0g55mpg[8].
- xenodiagnosis's MeSH tree code is recorded as E01.370.225.875.985[9].
- xenodiagnosis's MeSH tree code is recorded as E01.370.985[10].
- xenodiagnosis's MeSH tree code is recorded as E05.200.875.985[11].
- xenodiagnosis's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0751962[12].
- xenodiagnosis's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as xenodiagnosis[13].
- xenodiagnosis's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2778335811[14].
- xenodiagnosis's DeCS ID is recorded as 34528[15].
- xenodiagnosis's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C2778335811[16].
Body
Works and Contributions
xenodiagnosis is credited with the discovery of Émile Brumpt[3].
Why It Matters
xenodiagnosis draws 9 Wikipedia views per month (laboratory_diagnostics category, ranking #6 of 7).[2]