myokymia
an involuntary, spontaneous, localised quivering of a few muscles, or bundles within a muscle, but which are insufficient to move a joint
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myokymia
Summary
myokymia ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (131 views/month).[1]
Key Facts
- myokymia's subclass of is recorded as neuromuscular disease[2].
- myokymia's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as D020385[3].
- myokymia's ICD-10 ID is recorded as G51.4[4].
- myokymia's DiseasesDB is recorded as 31530[5].
- myokymia's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02rr2v1[6].
- myokymia's MeSH tree code is recorded as C10.597.613.650[7].
- myokymia's MeSH tree code is recorded as C23.888.592.608.650[8].
- myokymia's eMedicine ID is recorded as 1141267[9].
- myokymia's health specialty is recorded as neurology[10].
- myokymia's exact match is recorded as http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HP_0002411[11].
- myokymia's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0684219[12].
- myokymia's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0474520[13].
- myokymia's Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities ID is recorded as 10086154[14].
- myokymia's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as myokymia[15].
- myokymia's Human Phenotype Ontology ID is recorded as HP:0002411[16].
- myokymia's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2780336348[17].
- myokymia's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C2780336348[18].
Why It Matters
myokymia ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (131 views/month).[1] myokymia has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19]