Abbreviations: Abbreviations should be used sparingly -only where they ease the reader’s task by reducing repetition of long, technical terms. Initially use the word in full, followed by the abbreviation in parentheses. Thereafter use the abbreviation only. Trade names: Drugs should be referred ...
(4) complete postal address(es) of the affi liation(s) of the author(s), indicating the country in which the work was done, (5) an e-mail address to which proofs and reprint requests will be sent, plus telephone and fax numbers (6) the total number of...
ACGME policy at that time allowed ownership of certain terms by a specialty and hence required that the use of the term ''surgery'' be limited to the title of specialties that required a general surgery residency; just as the term ''dermatology'' could not be used by other specialties. ...
IMS Health (the pharmaceutical industry worldwide product database) was searched using the terms first launch, topical, and skin/dermatological for the preceding decade. These terms were used for inclusion but not exclusion so that intravenous and oral agents were also identified if they were for ...
Abbreviations must be defined when first used, both in the abstract and in the main text. Manuscripts must be as succinct as possible. Text must comply with the word and figure limits defined in Section 2. If authors consider that a manuscript should not conform to the limits specified, exce...
Abbreviations ATL adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma CCHF Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention DHF dengue hemorrhagic fever ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay HFRS hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome HPS hantavirus pulmonary syndrome HTLV human T-cell leukemia/...
When coding terminology is used, we recommend to avoid offensive or exclusionary terms such as "master", "slave", "blacklist" and "whitelist". We suggest using alternatives that are more appropriate and (self-) explanatory such as "primary", "secondary", "blocklist" and "allowl...
fax and email (email address re- quired) Short title of 45 characters or less, including spaces Abbreviations used (see below for detail on abbreviations) Up to 5 keywords (MeSH terms if possible; ISRCTN if desired), for abstract- ing (www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/2K/99Mbrowser.html)...
Abbreviations Chemical compounds studied in this article Keywords 1. Introduction 2. Exosomes in dermatology 3. Exosomes in cutaneous medical aesthetics 4. Current limitation of exosomes in clinical skin application 5. Conclusion and perspectives CRediT authorship contribution statement Declaration of Competing...
Spelling of English and medical terms should conform to the Oxford Dictionary and in British style respectively. Arabic numerals should be used for numbers above nine, for designators (e.g. case 1, day 3, etc) and for units for measure; numbers should be spelled out if below 10, at the...