malaise
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malaise
Summary
malaise is a symptom or sign[1]. malaise draws 553 Wikipedia views per month (symptom_or_sign category, ranking #47 of 200).[2]
Key Facts
- malaise's instance of is recorded as symptom or sign[3].
- malaise's subclass of is recorded as physiological condition[4].
- malaise's subclass of is recorded as discomfort[5].
- malaise's subclass of is recorded as neurological and physiological symptom[6].
- malaise's part of is recorded as psychological terminology[7].
- malaise's part of is recorded as disease[8].
- malaise's ICD-10 ID is recorded as R53.1[9].
- malaise's MedlinePlus ID is recorded as 003089[10].
- malaise's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0418s3[11].
- malaise's described by source is recorded as The Nuttall Encyclopædia[12].
- malaise's NCI Thesaurus ID is recorded as C3832[13].
- malaise's exact match is recorded as http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/SYMP_0019176[14].
- malaise's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0231218[15].
- malaise's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as malaise[16].
- malaise's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2779277585[17].
- malaise's Symptom Ontology ID is recorded as 0019176[18].
- malaise's WordNet 3.1 Synset ID is recorded as 14470485-n[19].
- malaise's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C2779277585[20].
Why It Matters
malaise draws 553 Wikipedia views per month (symptom_or_sign category, ranking #47 of 200).[2] malaise has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] malaise is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]