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1259242002: Hereditary von Willebrand disease (disorder)


Status: current, Sufficiently defined by necessary conditions definition status (core metadata concept). Date: 30-Nov 2022. Module: SNOMED CT core

Descriptions:

Id Description Lang Type Status Case? Module
5400386014 A rare, inherited bleeding disorder characterized by defective platelet adhesion and secondary coagulation defect that manifests as abnormal bleeding of variable severity occurring either spontaneously or in association with an invasive procedure. Three main subtypes are defined based on the type of von Willebrand factor defect: partial (type 1) or total (type 3) deficiency, and qualitative/functional anomalies (type 2). en Definition Active Entire term case sensitive (core metadata concept) SNOMED CT core
5400387017 A rare, inherited bleeding disorder characterised by defective platelet adhesion and secondary coagulation defect that manifests as abnormal bleeding of variable severity occurring either spontaneously or in association with an invasive procedure. Three main subtypes are defined based on the type of von Willebrand factor defect: partial (type 1) or total (type 3) deficiency, and qualitative/functional anomalies (type 2). en Definition Active Entire term case sensitive (core metadata concept) SNOMED CT core
5156368012 Hereditary von Willebrand disease en Synonym (core metadata concept) Active Only initial character case insensitive (core metadata concept) SNOMED CT core
5156369016 Hereditary von Willebrand disease (disorder) en Fully specified name Active Only initial character case insensitive (core metadata concept) SNOMED CT core


10 descendants. Search Descendants:

Expanded Value Set


Outbound Relationships Type Target Active Characteristic Refinability Group Values
A rare, inherited bleeding disorder characterized by defective platelet adhesion and secondary coagulation defect that manifests as abnormal bleeding of variable severity occurring either spontaneously or in association with an invasive procedure. Three main subtypes are defined based on the type of von Willebrand factor defect: partial (type 1) or total (type 3) deficiency, and qualitative/functional anomalies (type 2). Is a Includes true von Willebrand disease with mutation at the VWF locus, as well as mimicking disorders with other mutations (pseudo VWD) and acquired von Willebrand syndrome. true Inferred relationship Some
A rare, inherited bleeding disorder characterized by defective platelet adhesion and secondary coagulation defect that manifests as abnormal bleeding of variable severity occurring either spontaneously or in association with an invasive procedure. Three main subtypes are defined based on the type of von Willebrand factor defect: partial (type 1) or total (type 3) deficiency, and qualitative/functional anomalies (type 2). Is a Autosomal hereditary disorder true Inferred relationship Some
A rare, inherited bleeding disorder characterized by defective platelet adhesion and secondary coagulation defect that manifests as abnormal bleeding of variable severity occurring either spontaneously or in association with an invasive procedure. Three main subtypes are defined based on the type of von Willebrand factor defect: partial (type 1) or total (type 3) deficiency, and qualitative/functional anomalies (type 2). Interprets Haemostatic function true Inferred relationship Some 1
A rare, inherited bleeding disorder characterized by defective platelet adhesion and secondary coagulation defect that manifests as abnormal bleeding of variable severity occurring either spontaneously or in association with an invasive procedure. Three main subtypes are defined based on the type of von Willebrand factor defect: partial (type 1) or total (type 3) deficiency, and qualitative/functional anomalies (type 2). Has interpretation Abnormal true Inferred relationship Some 1

Inbound Relationships Type Active Source Characteristic Refinability Group
A form of von Willebrand disease (VWD) with characteristics of a bleeding disorder associated with a partial, quantitative plasmatic deficiency of an otherwise structurally and functionally normal von Willebrand factor (VWF). The type 1 disease is considered to be the most common form of VWD, caused by mutations in the VWF gene (12p13.3). Transmitted in an autosomal dominant manner. Is a True A rare, inherited bleeding disorder characterized by defective platelet adhesion and secondary coagulation defect that manifests as abnormal bleeding of variable severity occurring either spontaneously or in association with an invasive procedure. Three main subtypes are defined based on the type of von Willebrand factor defect: partial (type 1) or total (type 3) deficiency, and qualitative/functional anomalies (type 2). Inferred relationship Some
A form of von Willebrand disease (VWD) with characteristics of a bleeding disorder associated with a qualitative deficiency and functional anomalies of the Willebrand factor (VWF). Depending on the type of functional abnormalities, this form is classified as type 2A, 2B, 2M or 2N. The VWF gene (12p13.3) anomalies that lead to type 2 VWD involve the well-defined functional domains of the VWF protein. Most subtypes of type 2 VWD are transmitted in an autosomal dominant manner except for type 2N and some rare forms of type 2A which are autosomal recessive. Is a True A rare, inherited bleeding disorder characterized by defective platelet adhesion and secondary coagulation defect that manifests as abnormal bleeding of variable severity occurring either spontaneously or in association with an invasive procedure. Three main subtypes are defined based on the type of von Willebrand factor defect: partial (type 1) or total (type 3) deficiency, and qualitative/functional anomalies (type 2). Inferred relationship Some
A total or near-total absence of Willebrand factor (VWF) in the plasma and cellular compartments leading to a profound deficiency of plasmatic factor VIII (FVIII). It is the most severe form of von Willebrand disease. Onset usually occurs during the neonatal period or in infancy, but later onset has been reported. The disease is caused by homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations (mainly missense or large mutations) in the VWF gene (12p13.3) that lead to synthesis of a truncated protein or allele silencing. The pattern of inheritance is autosomal recessive. Is a True A rare, inherited bleeding disorder characterized by defective platelet adhesion and secondary coagulation defect that manifests as abnormal bleeding of variable severity occurring either spontaneously or in association with an invasive procedure. Three main subtypes are defined based on the type of von Willebrand factor defect: partial (type 1) or total (type 3) deficiency, and qualitative/functional anomalies (type 2). Inferred relationship Some

Reference Sets

Component annotation with string value reference set (foundation metadata concept)

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