Rickets: treatments, associated drugs and conditions

Summary:

Rickets: softening of bones.

We study 25,936 people who have Rickets. The information that eHealthMe analyzes includes:

- COVID vaccines that are associated with Rickets
- Medications that treat Rickets and their effectiveness
- 2,175 drugs that are associated with Rickets
- 1,409 conditions that are associated with Rickets

Phase IV trials are used to detect adverse drug outcomes and monitor drug effectiveness in the real world. With medical big data and AI algorithms, eHealthMe is running millions of phase IV trials and makes the results available to the public. Our original studies have been referenced on 600+ medical publications including The Lancet, Mayo Clinic Proceedings, and Nature.


Number of reports submitted per year:

Rickets: 25,936 reports.

COVID vaccines that are associated with Rickets:

Rickets treatments and how effective are they?

Common drugs associated with Rickets:

All the drugs that are associated with Rickets:

Common conditions associated with Rickets:

All the conditions that are associated with Rickets:

Browse all Rickets symptoms:

a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z

Do you take any medication?

- You can start a phase IV clinical trial to monitor drug safety and effectiveness.

Who is eHealthMe?

With medical big data and proven AI algorithms, eHealthMe provides a platform for everyone to run phase IV clinical trials. We study millions of patients and 5,000 more each day. Results of our real-world drug study have been referenced on 600+ medical publications, including The Lancet, Mayo Clinic Proceedings, and Nature. Our analysis results are available to researchers, health care professionals, patients (testimonials), and software developers (open API).

How we gather our data?

Healthcare data is obtained from a number of sources including the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). This information is aggregated and used to produce personalized reports that patients can reference. Browse all conditions on eHealthMe.

Recent studies on eHealthMe: