Salmonella gastroenteritis

disease
On this page

Also known as Salmonella caused gastroenteritis

Summary

Salmonella gastroenteritis (MONDO:0005950) is a disease. A subtype of salmonellosis — broader associated-gene and molecular evidence is on the parent page (see Disease family below).

Clinical features

No curated clinical features (Orphanet) for this disease.

Identifiers

Disease identifiers

FieldValue
Canonical nameSalmonella gastroenteritis
Mondo IDMONDO:0005950
EFOEFO:0007475
MeSHD012478
SNOMED CT42338000
UMLSC0036114
MedGen48541
GARD0024259
Is cancer (heuristic)no

Also known as: Salmonella caused gastroenteritis

Disease family

This is a subtype of salmonellosis. Genetic, therapeutic, and trial evidence is largely curated at the broader-term level — see the parent page for the associated-gene cohort and molecular evidence.

Classification path: disease › human disease › disease by etiologic mechanism › disease of primarily extrinsic mechanism › infectious diseasebacterial infectious diseaseprimary bacterial infectious diseasesalmonellosisSalmonella gastroenteritis

Related subtypes (4): typhoid fever, invasive non-typhoidal salmonellosis, paratyphoid fever, salmonella discitis

Genetics & variants

GWAS landscape

No GWAS associations recorded — common-variant (GWAS) studies don’t cover this disease (typical for Mendelian / rare diseases). See the curated gene cohort and Mendelian overlap below.

Variant details and genetic-evidence tiers

No tiered GWAS variants or ClinVar records for this disease.

Genes & proteins

No associated-gene cohort resolved for this disease. Atlas builds the molecular and therapeutic sections — associated genes, protein families, druggability, pathways, interactions, and drug associations — by aggregating over a disease’s associated genes (resolved via GWAS / GenCC / ClinVar / CIViC), and none resolved here. This is expected for antibody-mediated, autoimmune, or otherwise non-gene-defined conditions; the curated evidence for this disease is its clinical features, GWAS susceptibility, and clinical trials (above).

Function

No pathway enrichment — requires an associated-gene cohort.

Therapeutics

Drugs indicated for this disease

No approved or late-stage (phase ≥3) drug is indicated for this disease; the following are in earlier-phase trials only.

Earlier-phase candidates (phase 2, investigational — efficacy not yet established): Yellow Fever Vaccine.

Clinical trials & evidence

Clinical trials

Clinical trials: 0.

No linked Atlas pages yet — the cross-entity mesh grows as the corpus expands.