Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cephalic_disorder> ?p ?o }
- Cephalic_disorder abstract "Cephalic disorders (from the Greek word κεφάλη, meaning \"head\") are congenital conditions that stem from damage to, or abnormal development of, the budding nervous system. Cephalic means \"head\" or \"head end of the body.\"Cephalic disorders are not necessarily caused by a single factor, but may be influenced by hereditary or genetic conditions, nutritional deficiencies, or by environmental exposures during pregnancy, such as medication taken by the mother, maternal infection, or exposure to radiation (such disorders are more common in areas of the former Soviet Union affected by nuclear waste disposal problems, such as the area around the Mayak plant in Chelyabinsk, Russia.) Some cephalic disorders occur when the cranial sutures (the fibrous joints that connect the bones of the skull) join prematurely. Most cephalic disorders are caused by a disturbance that occurs very early in the development of the fetal nervous system.The human nervous system develops from a small, specialized plate of cells on the surface of the embryo. Early in development, this plate of cells forms the neural tube, a narrow sheath that closes between the third and fourth weeks of pregnancy to form the brain and spinal cord of the embryo. Four main processes are responsible for the development of the nervous system: cell proliferation, the process in which nerve cells divide to form new generations of cells; cell migration, the process in which nerve cells move from their place of origin to the place where they will remain for life; cell differentiation, the process during which cells acquire individual characteristics; and cell death, a natural process in which cells die.Damage to the developing nervous system is a major cause of chronic, disabling disorders and, sometimes, death in infants, children, and even adults. The degree to which damage to the developing nervous system harms the mind and body varies enormously. Many disabilities are mild enough to allow those afflicted to eventually function independently in society. Others are not. Some infants, children, and adults die, others remain totally disabled, and an even larger population is partially disabled, functioning well below normal capacity throughout life.The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) is currently \"conducting and supporting research on normal and abnormal brain and nervous system development.\"".
- Cephalic_disorder icd10 "Q00-Q07, Q67, Q75".
- Cephalic_disorder icd9 "-".
- Cephalic_disorder icd9 "740".
- Cephalic_disorder icd9 "742".
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageExternalLink detail_cephalic_disorders.htm.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageExternalLink pos_plagi.asp.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageExternalLink article.asp?issn=0022-3859;year=2003;volume=49;issue=2;spage=173;epage=4;aulast=Thomas.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageExternalLink cephalic_disorders.htm.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageID "232025".
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageLength "4989".
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageOutDegree "58".
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageRevisionID "659792748".
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Anencephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Bone.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Brachycephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Congenital_disorders.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Congenital_disorders_of_nervous_system.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Nervous_system.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Cell_(biology).
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Chelyabinsk.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Colpocephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Congenital_disorder.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Craniosynostosis.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Cyclopia.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Disability.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Embryo.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Encephalocele.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Ethmocephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Exencephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Fetus.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Genetics.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Greek_language.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Head.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Heredity.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Holoprosencephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Human_skull.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Hydranencephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Iniencephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink International_Statistical_Classification_of_Diseases_and_Related_Health_Problems.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Lissencephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink MOMO_syndrome.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Macrocephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Mayak.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Megalencephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Microcephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink National_Institute_of_Neurological_Disorders_and_Stroke.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Nerve.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Nervous_system.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Nutrition.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Otocephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Oxycephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Pharmaceutical_drug.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Plagiocephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Polycephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Porencephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Pregnancy.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Public_domain.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Radiation.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Russia.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Scaphocephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Schizencephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Soviet_Union.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Spinal_cord.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Trigonocephaly.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Twin_reversed_arterial_perfusion.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cephalic disorder".
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cephalic_disorder".
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLinkText "Macrocephaly".
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLinkText "Microcephaly".
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageWikiLinkText "cephalic disorder".
- Cephalic_disorder caption "A large encephalocele of a just born alive baby.".
- Cephalic_disorder icd "-".
- Cephalic_disorder icd "740".
- Cephalic_disorder icd "742".
- Cephalic_disorder icd "Q00-Q07, Q67, Q75".
- Cephalic_disorder name "Cephalic disorder".
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Cephalic_disorder wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_disease.
- Cephalic_disorder subject Category:Congenital_disorders.
- Cephalic_disorder subject Category:Congenital_disorders_of_nervous_system.
- Cephalic_disorder subject Category:Nervous_system.
- Cephalic_disorder hypernym Conditions.
- Cephalic_disorder type Disease.
- Cephalic_disorder type Disorder.
- Cephalic_disorder type Pediatric.
- Cephalic_disorder type Thing.
- Cephalic_disorder type Q12136.
- Cephalic_disorder comment "Cephalic disorders (from the Greek word κεφάλη, meaning \"head\") are congenital conditions that stem from damage to, or abnormal development of, the budding nervous system.".
- Cephalic_disorder label "Cephalic disorder".
- Cephalic_disorder sameAs Q584265.
- Cephalic_disorder sameAs Trastorn_encefàlic.
- Cephalic_disorder sameAs Trastorno_encefálico.
- Cephalic_disorder sameAs Malformations_congénitales_du_système_nerveux_central.
- Cephalic_disorder sameAs Malformações_cefálicas_congênitas.
- Cephalic_disorder sameAs m.01hr4w.
- Cephalic_disorder sameAs Malformație_cerebrală.
- Cephalic_disorder sameAs Q584265.
- Cephalic_disorder wasDerivedFrom Cephalic_disorder?oldid=659792748.
- Cephalic_disorder isPrimaryTopicOf Cephalic_disorder.