Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
In regards to item 2, I agree that a fix is required. I believe 'disease
phenotype' should be a subtype of 'clinical phenotype'. Not only according to
our current definition, but it seems intuitively as well, any instance of a
'disease phenotype' will also be an instance of a 'clinical phenotype'.
Conversely, an instance of a 'clinical phenotype' will not always be a 'disease
phenotype'. Can anyone think of a reason not to make this change?
This issue has been raised in a couple of different threads, but no discussion
has resulted such that a resolution could be achieved. As was pointed out, if
the current hierarchy is to be maintained, then either the definitions should
change or an elucidation should be provided to show why some phenotypes that
are characteristic of a disease will not also be clinical phenotypes.
Mark J
Original comment by mpjens@gmail.com
on 19 Feb 2012 at 10:03
Is a plant disease phenotype a clinical phenotype?
Original comment by cmung...@gmail.com
on 19 Feb 2012 at 10:41
I think, Mathias and Mark propose a valid solution with the definitions as they
are currently written.
Chris M:
Two points: (1) OGMS does not try to further elaborate the word 'clinically',
(2) OGMS currently considers only human organisms in-scope for being the
subject of care (but, currently, this is tacit and only amounts to a warning to
be careful when dealing with domains like veterinary medicine and plant
infectious diseases).
If you are taking a broad reading of 'clinically', I don't see any reason to
block the inference that a plant disease phenotype is a clinical phenotype. As
long as you have some reference for the canonical anatomy and physiology for
the plant in question, you can describe clinically abnormal phenotypes.
Original comment by albertgo...@gmail.com
on 20 Feb 2012 at 3:06
Ig OGMS is restricted to humans it should not attempt to define "disease
phenotype", it should import this from elsewhere. It could optionally subclass
it - e.g. "human disease phenotype"
Original comment by cmung...@gmail.com
on 20 Feb 2012 at 4:37
Chris M, could you provide some reasons that if a 'disease phenotype' is_a
'clinical phenotype', according to the current definitions and elucidations, it
would not apply to non-human organisms? My understanding of the the way in
which "disease" is used outside the human domain is limited, but at first gloss
it seems a plant that is diseased would be characterized by a clinically
abnormal phenotype. If a disease specific to (say) a type of fern is being
researched or treated by the requisite experts, then doesn't this fit current
usage in OGMS? I contend the mere fact it is considered a condition that
deviates from the canonical and requires treatment so as to restore "normal"
functioning makes it clinically abnormal.
As an aside, I agree that a future action item (at least for discussion) in
OGMS development is the incorporation of external references to related or
equivalent terms in other ontologies. I am less certain we should be outright
importing (via MIREOT?) something as basic as 'phenotype' or 'disease
phenotype'.
Original comment by mpjens@gmail.com
on 21 Feb 2012 at 5:40
Not all disease phenotypes are treated. Treatments are a relatively recent
innovation but there have been disease phenotypes for a while.
Original comment by cmung...@gmail.com
on 21 Feb 2012 at 9:05
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
MBrochhausen@gmail.com
on 6 Feb 2011 at 3:38