期刊名称:CLINICAL ORAL IMPLANTS RESEARCH
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Clinical Oral Implants Research conveys scientific progress in implant dentistry and its related areas.
The journal publishes
original research data of high scientific merit in the field of material sciences, physiology of wound healing, biology of tissue integration of implants, diagnosis and treatment planning, prevention of pathological processes jeopardizing the longevity of implants, clinical trials on implant systems, stomatognathic physiology related to oral implants, new developments in therapeutic concepts and prosthetic rehabilitation. review articles by experts on new developments in basic sciences related to implant dentistry and clinically applied concepts. case reports if they provide or document new fundamental knowledge. novel developments if they provide a technical novelty for any implant system. short communications of important research findings in a concise format and for rapid publication.
Articles are published in English with extended abstracts in French, German, Spanish and Japanese.
The journal is published bimonthly
Instructions to Authors
Manuscripts should be sent in quadruplet to the editorial address below: Clinical Oral Implants Research Department of Comprehensive Dental Care University of Berne School of Dental Medicine Freiburgstrasse 7 CH-3010 Berne Switzerland
or to one of the Associate Editors:
Dr. Hans-Peter Weber, DDS, DMD Harvard School of Dental Medicine Department of Periodontology 188 Longwood Avenue Boston MA 02115 USA
Prof. Dr. DR.H.C. Daniel van Steenberghe, MD, LDS Department of Periodontology Catholic University of Leuven Capucynenvoer 7 B-3000 Leuven Belgium
Authors submitting a paper do so on the understanding that the work has not been published before, is not being considered for publication elsewhere and has been read and approved by all authors. The submission of the manuscript by the authors means that the authors automatically agree to assign exclusive copyright to Blackwell Munksgaard if and when the manuscript is accepted for publication. When the manuscript has been accepted, the corresponding author will receive a Copyright Assignment Form from the editorial office to be returned signed on behalf of all co-authors. You can also download the Copyright Assignment Form here.
The work shall not be published elsewhere in any language without the written consent of the publisher. The articles published in this journal are protected by copyright, which covers translation rights and the exclusive right to reproduce and distribute all of the articles printed in the journal. No material published in the journal may be stored on microfilm or videocassettes or in electronic databases and the like or reproduced photographically without the prior written permission of the publisher.
The instructions to authors will be strictly adhered to by the Editor. Manuscripts otherwise prepared will be returned to the authors for revision prior to review.
Acceptable material - Original investigations, reviews, and case reports. The last will be published only if they provide new fundamental knowledge and if they use language understandable to the clinician. Proceedings of international meetings may also be considered for publication at the discretion of the Editor.
Manuscripts - Provide your manuscript on one newly formatted 3.5-inch floppy disk; 4 printed, double-spaced copies including figures and tables must accompany the disk. The paper manuscript and the file on the disk must be the same. Label the disk clearly with the journal name, author and title, file content, computer system (DOS, Windows or Macintosh), word processor (Word, WordPerfect etc.) and version used. Do not convert your manuscript to ASCII format. Include only the files corresponding to the manuscript. Full details of manuscript submission of disk will be sent following notification of acceptance of the manuscript. The author is responsible for all statements made in the work, including changes made by the copy editor, which must be reviewed in proof. Manuscripts must be written in English. All material, including legends and references, must be typed double-spaced on only one side of plain white paper, size ISO A4 (210 x 297 mm), U.S. letter size (8.5 x 11Iinches), with margins of at least 25 mm, or 1 inch. Articles should not normally exceed 10 printed pages, including illustrations and references. One printed page is the equivalent of 3.8 typed double-spaced pages using a 12-pitch font (12 characters per inch).Additional pages will be charged to the author(s) at the rate of DKK 800 per page. The article should be clearly divided as follows:
Title page - The first page should contain the title of the article, name(s) of the author(s), full first name(s), and institutional affiliation(s), a running title not to exceed 60 letters and spaces, and the name, telephone and fax numbers and complete mailing address of the author responsible for correspondence. The author must list appropriate key words for indexing purposes.
Abstract - A separate abstract page should contain the name(s) of the author(s) followed by initials, title of the article, followed by the abbreviated journal title(Clin Oral Impl Res); and an abstract not to exceed 250 words. This should be structured into: objectives - material and metods - results - conclusions, and no other information.
Introduction - Summarise the rationale and purpose of the study, giving only strictly pertinent references. Do not review existing literature extensively. State clearly the working hypothesis.
Material and methods - Material and methods should be presented in sufficient detail to allow confirmation of the observations. Published methods should be referenced and discussed only briefly, unless modifications have been made. Indicate the statistical methods used, if applicable.
Results - Present your results in a logical sequence in the text, tables, and illustrations. Do not repeat in the text all data in the tables and illustrations. The important observations should be emphasised.
Discussion - Summarise the findings without repeating in detail the data given in the Results section. Relate your observations to other relevant studies and point out the implications of the findings and their limitations. Cite other relevant studies.
Acknowledgements - Acknowledge persons who have made substantive contributions to the study. Authors are responsible for obtaining written permission from everyone acknowledged by name because readers may infer their endorsement of the data and conclusions. Sources of financial support may be acknowledged.
Short communications -Short communications, limited to two printed pages including illustrations and references, will be considered for rapid publication. Such papers must be based on work that is of special importance or has the potential for great impact. Short communications need not follow the usual division into Material and methods, etc., but should have an abstract.
References - in the text should quote the last name(s) of the author(s) and the year of publication (Black & Miller 1988). Three or more authors should always be referred to as, for example, (Fox et al. 1977).
A list of references should be given at the end of the paper and should follow the recommendations in Units, symbols and abbreviations: a guide for biological and medical editors and authors (1988), p. 52, London: The Royal Society of Medicine.
a) The arrangement of the references should be alphabetical by author's surname.
b) The order of the items in each reference should be: (i) for journal references: name(s) of author(s), year, title of paper, title of journal, volume number, first and last page numbers. (ii) for book references: name(s) of author(s), year, title of book, edition, volume, chapter and/ or page number, town of publication, publisher.
c) Author's names should be arranged thus: Daniels, J.A., Kelly, R.A. & Til, T.C. Note the use of the ampersand and omission of comma before it. Author's names when repeated in the next reference are always spelled out in full.
d) The year of publication should be surrounded by parentheses: (1966).
c) The title of the paper should be included, without quotation marks.
f) The journal title should be written in full, italicised (single underlining on typescript), and followed by volume number in bold type (double underlining on typescript), and page numbers.
Examples - Tonetti, M. S., Schmid, J., Hämmerle,C. H. & Lang, N. P. (1993) Intraepithelial antigen-presenting cells in the keratinized mucosa around teeth and osseointegrated implants. Clinical Oral Implants Research 4: 177- 186.
Poole, B., Ohkuma, S. & Warburton, M. (1978)Some aspects of the intracellular breakdown of erogenous and endogenous proteins. In: Segal, H.S. & Doyle, D.J., eds. Protein turnover and lysosome function, 1st edition, p. 43. New York: AcademicPress.
Illustrations - All figures should clarify the text and their number should be kept to a minimum. Details must be large enough to retain their clarity after reduction in size. Illustrations should preferably fill a single-column width (81 mm) after reduction, although in exceptional cases 120mm (double-column) and 168 mm (full page) widths will be accepted. Micrographs should be designed to be reproduced without reduction, and they should be dressed directly on the micrograph with a linear size scale, arrows, and other designators as needed. Submit at least one original set of illustrations, identifying each with a label on the back which indicates the number, author's name, and the top. Alternatively, arrange micrographs into plates fitting the space appropriately. Copies of the original illustration maybe submitted with the second and third copies of the manuscript. Line drawings should be professionally drawn; halftones should exhibit high contrast. Figure legends must be typed double-spaced on a separate page at the end of the manuscript. Colour illustrations in small numbers may be accepted free of charge to the authors at the discretion of the Editor. Otherwise the author must pay for the illustrations at a rate to be quoted by the publisher. Authors must submit the original colour transparencies and 2 sets of colour prints with the manuscript.
Tables - Tables should be numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals. Type each table on a separate sheet, with titles making them self-explanatory. Due regard should be given to the proportions of the printed page.
Scientific names - Proper names of bacteria should be binomial and should be singly underlined on the typescript. The full proper name (e.g., Streptococcus sanguis) must be given upon first mention. The generic name may be abbreviated thereafter with the first letter of the genus (e.g., S. sanguis). If abbreviation of the generic name could cause confusion, the full name should be used. If the vernacular form of a genus name (e.g., streptococci) is used, the first letter of the vernacular name is not capitalised and the name is not underlined. Use of two letters of the genus (e.g., Ps. for Peptostreptococcus) is incorrect, even though it might avoid ambiguity. With regard to drugs, generic names should be used instead of proprietary names. If a proprietary name is used, it must be attached when the term is first used.
Abbreviations and symbols- The symbol % is to be used for percent, h for hour, min for minute, and s for second. In vitro, in vivo, in situ and other Latin expressions are to be italicised. Use only standard abbreviations. All units will be metric. Use no roman numerals in the text. In decimals, a decimal point and not a comma will be used. Avoid abbreviations in the title. The full term for which an abbreviation stands should precede its first use in the text unless it is a standard unit of measurement. In cases of doubt, the spelling orthodoxy of Webster's third new international dictionary will be adhered to.
Proofs - Page proofs only will be sent. Only minor corrections are allowed without extra cost.
Offprints - The senior authors are given 50 offprints of their article. Additional offprints can be ordered from the publisher by using the offprint order form accompanying the proofs when page proofs are returned
Editorial Board Tomas Albrektsson, Gothenburg, Sweden Salomon Amar, Boston, MA, USA Robert A Bagramian, Ann Arbor, MI, USA Mark P Bartold, Brisbane, Australia Urs C Belser, Geneva, Switzerland Tord Berglundh, Gothenburg, Sweden John B Brunski, Troy, NY, USA Daniel Buser, Berne, Switzerland Gunnar E Carlsson, Gothenburg, Sweden David L Cochran, San Antonio, TX, USA Joseph P Fiorellini, Boston, MA, USA Michael E Fritz, Atlanta, GA, USA Per-Olof Glantz, Malm? Sweden Gary Goldstein, New York, NY, USA Hans-Göran Gröndahl, Gothenburg, Sweden Ulrich M Gross, Berlin, Germany Christoph H F Hämmerle, Zürich, Switzerland Erik Hjørting-Hansen, Copenhagen, Denmark Anita Ignatius, Ulm, Germany John A Jansen, Nijmegen, The Netherlands Torsten Jemt, Gothenburg, Sweden Thorkild Karring, Aarhus, Denmark Denis F Kinane, Glasgow, UK Harald Löe, Osterås, Norway Dan Lundgren, Gothenburg, Sweden Andrea Mombelli, Geneva, Switzerland Attila Olah, Berne, Switzerland Giovan Paolo Pini Prato, Florence, Italy Marx Quirynen, Leuven, Belgium Robert Schenk, Berne, Switzerland Jürg Schmid, Berne, Switzerland Hubert Schroeder, Opfikon, Switzerland Svi Schwartz, Jerusalem, Israel Lars Sennerby, Gothenburg, Sweden Thomas D Taylor, Farmington, CT, USA Maurizio S Tonetti, London, UK Giorgio Vogel, Milan, Italy Ann Wenzel, Aarhus, Denmark Ray C Williams, Chapel Hill, NC, USA Thomas G Wilson, Dallas, TX, USA Christopher C L Wyatt, Vancouver, Canada R Yemm, Dundee, UK
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