Disease/Symptom Database
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12.4 years ago
Dirk ▴ 100

Hello!

Does anyone know of any databases that have a full list of human diseases, ailments, and their symptoms? I've tried working with UMLS, but the process of actually getting data is impossible. The Disease Ontology website is also nice, but it doesn't really have any symptoms associated with any of the diseases they have listed.

Ideas?

Edit:

cross posted on healthcare-it: http://healthcareit.stackexchange.com/questions/462

disease database • 40k views
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Hi, did you get a consolidated dataset with diseases and its symptoms?

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12.4 years ago

Please see responses to a question I posed a couple weeks back - Know of a database of disease symptoms, preferably linking to MeSH terms?. I was provided, to date, with two good answers, from which I cannot decide on a best response, pending testing by colleagues. Nonetheless, those answers may be complementary to what is posted here.

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link unreachable. Do you mind updating it? (I'm interested by the answer also)

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12.4 years ago

There is a Human Phenotype Ontology: http://www.human-phenotype-ontology.org/hpoweb/showterm?id=HP:0000122 or even Omim.

I wonder if you could find another source of information at http://healthcareit.stackexchange.com/

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OMIM is good, but restricted to genetic issues. Thanks for the link to the ontology wesbite--I'll have to take a look at that. Hopefully it isn't just simple descriptions of phenotype issues in humans

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12.4 years ago

Hi Dirk, This is a great question, but one where the answer is still a work in progress. Many of the large databases of information related to human disease are simply not complete, or the information is inadequately curated (or even incorrect), or not easily accessible to automated search techniques. The Human Phenotype Ontology (which Pierre mentions above) is very, very good -- however many of the terms are not formally defined, making mapping to other ontologies difficult. OMIM, while limited to genetic disease, is still vast -- but not as well-curated as it could be, and I have seen some curious conclusions drawn from mining OMIM data. These data are best reviewed with a clinician collaborator familiar with the diseases you are interested in.

Some other sources worth checking out are GeneReviews: here (although limited to single-gene conditions, but the information has a high degree of accuracy.)

Also, for neurologic conditions an interesting tool is SimulConsult, which is under constant update and is expanding to include non-neurologic and non-genetic diseases: here Its use is free, but I think you do have to register.

These are obviously small corners of human disease, but I am not aware of anything more comprehensive than UMLS and MeSH for "all of human diseases." I suspect a collaborative effort between ontologists and physician-researchers in multiple specialties will gradually organize this knowledge into the kind of dataset you are looking for.

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7.2 years ago
Emre ▴ 110

Hi,

Have a look at the Human symptoms–disease network. All the disease-symptoms relationships identified from text mining on Pubmed meta data and mapped to MeSH are in the supplementary data set 3.

Note that these are inferred relationships, yet reported to be fairly accurate through validation on randomly sampled and expert curated data (after some filtering). You might consider doing a filtering based on the TF-IDF scores provided in the file (>3.5 would give reasonable confidence --pretty close to P<0.05 cutoff the authors used in their analysis--).

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12.4 years ago
Qdjm 1.9k

I haven't looked into this in a few years but I think that it will be difficult to find a comprehensive, publicly-accessible database linking codified disease terms to codified symptoms. However, there have been some large-scale projects to collect this type of data, none of which make their data accessible, AFAIK, but maybe you can start there:

  1. Quick Medical Reference is no longer commercially available but you could try contacting the University of Pittsburgh to see whether they are willing to share the data.
  2. The Promedas project is also based on a database linking diseases to symptoms and, at one point, it was publicly funded but now it seems to have gone commercial.
  3. Another place to look is UpToDate. It's not clear that they've codified anything but they should have well-organized documents that connect diseases and symptoms.

Good luck! Please let me know if you find anything.

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12.1 years ago
Camwebb ▴ 10

Thanks for this question. One I have been pondering for a while. Please visit this post for one possible way to go ahead with an open, distributed database of diseases X symptoms.

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