Preferred Name |
Dementia |
|
Synonyms |
Progressive dementia Dementia, progressive Dementia |
|
Definitions |
A loss of global cognitive ability of sufficient amount to interfere with normal social or occupational function. Dementia represents a loss of previously present cognitive abilities, generally in adults, and can affect memory, thinking, language, judgment, and behavior. |
|
ID |
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HP_0000726 |
|
database_cross_reference |
MSH:D003704 UMLS:C0497327 SNOMEDCT_US:52448006 |
|
has exact synonym |
Progressive dementia Dementia, progressive Dementia |
|
has_alternative_id |
HP:0002274 HP:0007122 HP:0007150 HP:0007283 |
|
has_obo_namespace |
human_phenotype |
|
id |
HP:0000726 |
|
imported from | ||
label |
Dementia |
|
notation |
HP:0000726 |
|
prefLabel |
Dementia |
|
textual definition |
A loss of global cognitive ability of sufficient amount to interfere with normal social or occupational function. Dementia represents a loss of previously present cognitive abilities, generally in adults, and can affect memory, thinking, language, judgment, and behavior. |
|
subClassOf |
This ontology integrates with OntoloBridge, allowing community users to suggest additions to the public ontology. Complete the template below to submit a term request directly to the ontology maintainer.
Term Label (required)
Suggested term name. If a term can be described with multiple synonyms, only list the preferred name here.
Term description (required)
A brief definition, description, or usage of your suggested term. Additional term synonyms may be listed in this section.
Superclass (required)
The parent term of the suggested term. The parent term should be an existing entry of the current ontology. The superclass can be selected directly from Bioportal's Classes tree viewer.
References (optional)
Provide evidence for the existence of the requested term such as Pubmed IDs of papers or links to other resources that describe the term.
Justification (optional)
Provide any additional information about the requested term here.