All terms in HP
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Transient global amnesia | HP_0010534 | [A paroxysmal, transient loss of memory function with preservation of immediate recall and remote memory but with a severe impairment of memory for recent events and ability to retain new information.] |
| Small sella turcica | HP_0010538 | [An abnormally small sella turcica.] |
| halophenol | CHEBI_38856 | |
| Thin calvarium | HP_0010539 | [The presence of an abnormally thin calvarium.] |
| Contracture of the proximal interphalangeal joint of the 2nd finger | HP_0009540 | [Chronic loss of joint motion of the proximal interphalangeal joint of the 2nd finger due to structural changes in non-bony tissue.] |
| Paroxysmal vertigo | HP_0010532 | [Paroxysmal episodes of vertigo.] |
| Spasmus nutans | HP_0010533 | [The combination of pendular nystagmus, head nodding, and torticollis.] |
| immunoglobulin gamma Fc receptor II/III/IV | PR_000001355 | [A protein with a core domain architecture consisting of an extracellular domain containing two copies of the Immunoglobulin domain (Pfam:PF00047), followed by a single-pass transmembrane region and a small intracellular domain. The active protein is a low affinity receptor for immunoglobulin gamma chain Fc region. Human II-a, II-b, and II-c represent a recent gene expansion and are equally related to mouse II, III, and IV. Human III-A and III-B are closely related and closer to mouse IV than to mouse III.] |
| Palatal myoclonus | HP_0010530 | [Palatal myoclonus is characterized by myoclonic (rhythmic involuntary jerky) movements of the soft palate.] |
| Spinal myoclonus | HP_0010531 | [Spinal myoclonus is generally due to a tumor, infection, injury, or degenerative process of the spinal cord, and is characterized by involuntary rhythmic muscle contractions, usually at a rate of more than one per second. Myoclonus occurs synchronously in several muscles and can be increased in severity and frequency by fatigue or stress, but is usually unaffected by sensory stimuli. Spinal myoclonus ceases during sleep or anesthesia.] |
| Broad phalanges of the 2nd finger | HP_0009547 | |
| muscle layer of infundibulum of uterine tube | UBERON_0007182 | [A muscle layer that is part of a uterine tube infundibulum.] |
| heart layer | UBERON_0005983 | [The laminar structure of the heart] |
| uterine tube infundibulum | UBERON_0003984 | [The funnel-like expansion of the abdominal extremity of the uterine tube[MP]] |
| conus arteriosus | UBERON_0003983 | [A conical pouch formed from the upper and left angle of the right ventricle in the chordate heart, from which the pulmonary artery arises[WP]. the anteriosuperior, smooth-walled portion of the cavity of the right ventricle, beginning at the supraventricular crest and terminates in the pulmonary trunk[MP].] |
| Bullet-shaped phalanges of the 2nd finger | HP_0009548 | [A second finger with short and wide phalanx that tapers distally. Bullet-shaped phalanges lack the normal diaphyseal constriction.] |
| serosa of infundibulum of uterine tube | UBERON_0007181 | [A serous membrane that is part of a uterine tube infundibulum.] |
| sinusoid | UBERON_0003909 | [small blood vessel similar to a capillary but with a fenestrated endothelium. Sinusoids are found in the liver, lymphoid tissue, endocrine organs, and hematopoietic organs such as the bone marrow and the spleen. Sinusoids found within terminal villi of the placenta are not comparable to these; they possess a continuous endothelium and complete basal lamina[WP].] |
| tracheobronchial tree | UBERON_0007196 | [The structure from the trachea, bronchi, and bronchioles that forms the airways that supply air to the lungs. The lining of the tracheobronchial tree consists of ciliated columnar epithelial cells.] |
| Muscle flaccidity | HP_0010547 | [A type of paralysis in which a muscle becomes soft and yields to passive stretching, which results from loss of all or practically all peripheral motor nerves that innervated the muscle. Muscle tone is reduced and the affected muscles undergo extreme atrophy within months of the loss of innervation.] |