Schema.org Vocabulary › Class: SuperficialAnatomy

SuperficialAnatomy

https://schema.org/SuperficialAnatomy

Anatomical features that can be observed by sight (without dissection), including the form and proportions of the human body as well as surface landmarks that correspond to deeper subcutaneous structures. Superficial anatomy plays an important role in sports medicine, phlebotomy, and other medical specialties as underlying anatomical structures can be identified through surface palpation. For example, during back surgery, superficial anatomy can be used to palpate and count vertebrae to find the site of incision. Or in phlebotomy, superficial anatomy can be used to locate an underlying vein; for example, the median cubital vein can be located by palpating the borders of the cubital fossa (such as the epicondyles of the humerus) and then looking for the superficial signs of the vein, such as size, prominence, ability to refill after depression, and feel of surrounding tissue support. As another example, in a subluxation (dislocation) of the glenohumeral joint, the bony structure becomes pronounced with the deltoid muscle failing to cover the glenohumeral joint allowing the edges of the scapula to be superficially visible. Here, the superficial anatomy is the visible edges of the scapula, implying the underlying dislocation of the joint (the related anatomical structure).

Subclass of: MedicalEntity

Properties from SuperficialAnatomy

PropertyDescriptionRange
significanceThe significance associated with the superficial anatomy; as an example, how characteristics of the superficial anatomy can suggest underlying medical conditions or courses of treatment.Text
associatedPathophysiologyIf applicable, a description of the pathophysiology associated with the anatomical system, including potential abnormal changes in the mechanical, physical, and biochemical functions of the system.Text
relatedAnatomyAnatomical systems or structures that relate to the superficial anatomy.AnatomicalSystem, AnatomicalStructure
relatedTherapyA medical therapy related to this anatomy.MedicalTherapy
relatedConditionA medical condition associated with this anatomy.MedicalCondition

Properties from MedicalEntity

PropertyDescriptionRange
medicineSystemThe system of medicine that includes this MedicalEntity, for example 'evidence-based', 'homeopathic', 'chiropractic', etc.MedicineSystem
relevantSpecialtyIf applicable, a medical specialty in which this entity is relevant.MedicalSpecialty
fundingA [[Grant]] that directly or indirectly provide funding or sponsorship for this item. See also [[ownershipFundingInfo]].Grant
recognizingAuthorityIf applicable, the organization that officially recognizes this entity as part of its endorsed system of medicine.Organization
legalStatusThe drug or supplement's legal status, including any controlled substance schedules that apply.DrugLegalStatus, MedicalEnumeration, Text
studyA medical study or trial related to this entity.MedicalStudy
codeA medical code for the entity, taken from a controlled vocabulary or ontology such as ICD-9, DiseasesDB, MeSH, SNOMED-CT, RxNorm, etc.MedicalCode
guidelineA medical guideline related to this entity.MedicalGuideline

Properties from Thing

PropertyDescriptionRange
potentialActionIndicates a potential Action, which describes an idealized action in which this thing would play an 'object' role.Action
imageAn image of the item. This can be a [[URL]] or a fully described [[ImageObject]].URL, ImageObject
sameAsURL of a reference Web page that unambiguously indicates the item's identity. E.g. the URL of the item's Wikipedia page, Wikidata entry, or official website.URL
ownerA person or organization who owns this Thing.Organization, Person
descriptionA description of the item.TextObject, Text
subjectOfA CreativeWork or Event about this Thing.Event, CreativeWork
urlURL of the item.URL
additionalTypeAn additional type for the item, typically used for adding more specific types from external vocabularies in microdata syntax. This is a relationship between something and a class that the thing is in. Typically the value is a URI-identified RDF class, and in this case corresponds to the use of rdf:type in RDF. Text values can be used sparingly, for cases where useful information can be added without their being an appropriate schema to reference. In the case of text values, the class label should follow the schema.org style guide.Text, URL
disambiguatingDescriptionA sub property of description. A short description of the item used to disambiguate from other, similar items. Information from other properties (in particular, name) may be necessary for the description to be useful for disambiguation.Text
alternateNameAn alias for the item.Text
nameThe name of the item.Text
identifierThe identifier property represents any kind of identifier for any kind of [[Thing]], such as ISBNs, GTIN codes, UUIDs etc. Schema.org provides dedicated properties for representing many of these, either as textual strings or as URL (URI) links. See [background notes](/docs/datamodel.html#identifierBg) for more details. Text, URL, PropertyValue
mainEntityOfPageIndicates a page (or other CreativeWork) for which this thing is the main entity being described. See [background notes](/docs/datamodel.html#mainEntityBackground) for details.CreativeWork, URL