All terms in DOID
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| immune system disease | DOID_2914 | [A disease of anatomical entity that is located_in the immune system.] |
| obsolete lymphoid tissue disease | DOID_70 | |
| torticollis | SYMP_0000617 | |
| abnormal posture | SYMP_0000618 | |
| loss of height | SYMP_0000616 | |
| fever | SYMP_0000613 | [Fever is a neurological and physiological symptom characterized by a rise of body temperature above the normal whether a natural response (as to infection) or artificially induced for therapeutic reasons.] |
| periumbilic abdominal pain | SYMP_0000611 | |
| abdominal pain | SYMP_0000457 | |
| d-block element atom | CHEBI_33561 | |
| transition element atom | CHEBI_27081 | [An element whose atom has an incomplete d sub-shell, or which can give rise to cations with an incomplete d sub-shell.] |
| periumbilic abdominal rigidity | SYMP_0000612 | |
| abdominal rigidity | SYMP_0000454 | |
| miliaria profunda | DOID_0070320 | [A miliaria that is characterized by ductal occlusion of the papillary dermis causing the gland's secretions to leak between the superficial and deep layers of the skin resulting in a rapidly-spreading flesh-colored rash.] |
| miliaria | DOID_1382 | [A sweat gland disease that is characterized by blocked eccrine sweat glands and ducts.] |
| tetany | SYMP_0000619 | |
| melanoma in congenital melanocytic nevus | DOID_0070327 | [A skin melanoma that arises from a congenital melanocytic nevus.] |
| adult hepatocellular carcinoma | DOID_0070328 | [A hepatocellular carcinoma that is characterized by hepatic mass, abdominal pain and, in advanced stages, jaundice, cachexia and liver failure and often develops in the setting of chronic necro-inflammation.] |
| hepatocellular carcinoma | DOID_684 | [A liver carcinoma that has_material_basis_in undifferentiated hepatocytes and located_in the liver.] |
| abdominal mass | SYMP_0000798 | |
| malignant pediatric adrenal gland pheochromocytoma | DOID_0070325 | [An adrenal gland pheochromocytoma that is characterized by rare chromaffin cell tumors which secrete catecholamines, and has a higher prevalence of hereditary factors and metastatis in children than adults.] |