Unverricht–Lundborg disease (abbreviated ULD or EPM1), the most common form of progressive myoclonic epilepsy
Parkinson's disease | Alzheimer's disease | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | Huntington's disease | Centers for Disease Control | Bright's disease | Dutch elm disease | disease | Crohn's disease | Chagas disease | sexually transmitted disease | Plague (disease) | Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | Sexually transmitted disease | Lyme disease | Gaucher's disease | cardiovascular disease | Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization | Alzheimer's Disease | Paget's disease of bone | Motor Neurone Disease Association | Graves' disease | End stage renal disease | chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | Chronic kidney disease | chronic kidney disease | Cardiovascular disease | Batten disease | Tay-Sachs disease | Schilder's disease |
A 12 base pair insertion in the 5' flanking region of the Cystatin B gene has been linked to some individuals with Unverricht-Lundborg disease.
With Heinrich Unverricht (1853–1912), the eponymous "Wagner-Unverricht syndrome" is named, which is a muscle disease related to polymyositis, characterized by chronic muscle inflammation that results in muscle weakness and skin rash.