WormMine

WS295

Intermine data mining platform for C. elegans and related nematodes

Disease Ontology : DOID:0050466 Loeys-Dietz syndrome Disease Ontology

Namespace  disease_ontology Obsolete  false
Description  A syndrome that is characterized by increased risk of aortic aneurysm and dissection, elongated limbs, hypertelorism, bifid uvula and easy skin bruising due to mutations in TGFB3 that results in connective tissue defects.

1 Ontology

Name
Disease Ontology

7 Parents

Identifier Name Description
DOID:4 disease A disease is a disposition (i) to undergo pathological processes that (ii) exists in an organism because of one or more disorders in that organism.
DOID:225 syndrome A disease characterized by a group of signs and symptoms that occur together and characterize a particular abnormality.
DOID:0050177 monogenic disease A genetic disease that is the result of one or more abnormal alleles and may be dominant, semi-dominant, or recessive.
DOID:630 genetic disease A disease that has_material_basis_in genetic variations in the human genome.
DOID:0050736 autosomal dominant disease An autosomal genetic disease that is characterized by the presence of one disease-associated mutation of a gene which is sufficient to cause the disease.
DOID:0050739 autosomal genetic disease A monogenic disease that has_material_basis_in a mutation in a single gene on one of the non-sex chromosomes.
DOID:0050466 Loeys-Dietz syndrome A syndrome that is characterized by increased risk of aortic aneurysm and dissection, elongated limbs, hypertelorism, bifid uvula and easy skin bruising due to mutations in TGFB3 that results in connective tissue defects.

12 Relations

Relationship
Parent Term . Identifier

Child Term . Identifier
is_a DOID:0050736 DOID:0050466
is_a DOID:225 DOID:0050466
is_a DOID:0050177 DOID:0050466
is_a DOID:0050739 DOID:0050466
is_a DOID:4 DOID:0050466
is_a DOID:630 DOID:0050466
is_a DOID:0050466 DOID:0060964
is_a DOID:0050466 DOID:0070233
is_a DOID:0050466 DOID:0070234
is_a DOID:0050466 DOID:0070235
is_a DOID:0050466 DOID:0070236
is_a DOID:0050466 DOID:0070237

0 Synonyms