{"Name":"Pityriasis rotunda","DiseaseID__c":"GARD:0010904","id":10904,"encodedName":"pityriasis-rotunda","IsDeleted":false,"Disease_Name_Full__c":"Pityriasis rotunda","Xref_IDs__c":"238639005; C0343060; MEDGEN:575364; MONDO:0023388","USA_Estimate__c":null,"No_of_Specialist_Tagsa__c":0,"No_of_ClinGen_records__c":0,"No_of_GeneReviews__c":0,"No_of_HHS_records__c":0,"World_Estimate__c":null,"No_of_HRSA_records__c":0,"Evidence_Based_Score__c":0,"No_of_Disease_Descriptions__c":2,"Disease_Characteristics_Score__c":1,"No_of_Age_at_Onset__c":0,"Description_Source__c":"MONDO:0023388","Disease_Description__c":"Pityriasis rotunda is a rare skindisease characterized by round, scaly, pigmented patches that mainly occur on the trunk, arms and legs. There are two types of pityriasis rotunda.","GARD_Name__c":"Pityriasis rotunda","GARD_Synonym__c":null,"Curated_Disease_Description_Source__c":"GARD:0010904","Curated_Disease_Description__c":"Pityriasis rotunda is a rare skin disease characterized by round, scaly, pigmented patches that mainly occur on the trunk, arms and legs. There are two types of Pityriasis rotunda. Type 2 Pityriasis rotunda is not associated with internal disease or malignancy. The cause of Pityriasis rotunda is unknown, but it may be a variant of ichthyosis vulgaris. Type 1 most often occurs with liver and stomach cancer.","Curated_USA_Estimate_Source__c":null,"Curated_USA_Estimate__c":null,"Age_at_Onset_Snippet_Text__c":null,"SourceID__c":null,"Deprecated__c":"No","Disease_Concept_Type__c":"Rare Disease Entity","MONDO_ID__c":"MONDO:0023388","ORPHANET_ID__c":null,"Replaced_By_ID__c":null,"Display_Spanish_Disease_Name__c":null,"Spanish_Description_Source__c":null,"Spanish_Description__c":null,"Spanish_Disease_Name__c":null,"Spanish_GARD_Synonym__c":null,"Category_Linearization__c":null,"icd10_id__c":null,"mesh_id__c":null,"omim_id__c":null,"snomed_id__c":null,"umls_id__c":null,"GARD_Disease__c":[{"Curated_Disease_Description__c":"Pityriasis rotunda is a rare skin disease characterized by round, scaly, pigmented patches that mainly occur on the trunk, arms and legs. There are two types of Pityriasis rotunda. Type 2 Pityriasis rotunda is not associated with internal disease or malignancy. The cause of Pityriasis rotunda is unknown, but it may be a variant of ichthyosis vulgaris. Type 1 most often occurs with liver and stomach cancer.","Curated_Disease_Description_Source__c":"GARD:0010904","Name":"Pityriasis rotunda","estimateUsa":""}],"External_Identifier_Disease__c":[{"URL__c":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/medgen/?term=575364","Source__c":"C0343060","Xref__c":"MEDGEN:575364"},{"URL__c":"https://uts.nlm.nih.gov/uts/umls/concept/C0343060","Source__c":"C0343060","Xref__c":"C0343060"},{"URL__c":"https://browser.ihtsdotools.org/?perspective=full&conceptId1=238639005","Source__c":"C0343060; MONDO:0023388","Xref__c":"238639005"},{"URL__c":"http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/MONDO_0023388","Source__c":"GARD:0010904","Xref__c":"MONDO:0023388"}],"tags":{},"synonyms":[""]}