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期刊名称:CLINICAL ANATOMY

ISSN:0897-3806
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Bi-monthly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/home
期刊网址:http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/jhome/37476
影响因子:2.414
主题范畴:ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal
Cover Image

 

Aims and Scope

CLINICAL ANATOMY is the Official Journal of the American Association of Clinical Anatomists and the British Association of Clinical Anatomists.

The goal of CLINICAL ANATOMY is to provide a medium for the exchange of current information between anatomists and clinicians. This journal embraces anatomy in all its aspects as applied to medical practice. Furthermore, the journal assists physicians in keeping abreast of new methodologies for patient management and informs educators of new developments in clinical anatomy and teaching techniques.

CLINICAL ANATOMY publishes original and review articles of scientific, clinical, and educational interest. Papers covering the application of anatomic principles to the solution of clinical problems and/or the application of clinical observations to expand anatomic knowledge are welcomed.


Instructions to Authors
Manuscript Submission

Submit all new manuscripts online. Launch your web browser and go to http://ca-wiley.manuscriptcentral.com. Check for an existing account. If you are submitting for the first time, and you do not have an existing account, create a new account. Follow all instructions.

At the end of a successful submission, a confirmation screen with manuscript number will appear and you will receive an e-mail confirming that the manuscript has been received by the journal. If this does not happen, please check your submission and/or contact tech support at edsupport@wiley.com.

Submit manuscript and all figures as one file if possible. You do not need to mail any paper copies of your manuscript.

Upon acceptance of an article for publication, the author will be asked to sign a copyright transfer agreement, transferring rights to the publisher, who reserves copyright.

No paper that has been published or is under consideration for publication elsewhere will be considered for publication by CLINICAL ANATOMY. A statement to this effect must accompany the manuscript.

The editors and the publisher reserve the right to return manuscripts and illustrations that are not in proper finished form to the author for revision.

Letters to the Editor(s) are encouraged.

The editorial board will consider expediting the publication of manuscripts of significant interest to the readership. Such mauscripts must be sufficiently high quality and timeliness to pass through the review/revision process quickly.

Categories of articles
  • Original Communications*
    Original research in clinical anatomy
  • Medical Education*
    Educational developments in clinical anatomy and teaching techniques
  • Topic for Debate*
    Discussion of controversial topics; mainly in medical education
  • Review*
    A comprehensive but critical analysis of a topic that includes perspectives of the past, present, and future, if applicable
  • Viewpoint*
    Opinions or perspectives on clinical anatomy and medical education
  • Problems in Diagnostic Imaging*
    Problem solving based on the interpretation of one of more high quality images
  • Clinical Conundrum Corner*
    Puzzling clinical presentations understood by their anatomical basis
  • Clinical Vignettes*
    Short report of clinical case illustrating a clinical and an anatomical point
  • Behind the Eponym*
    Although eponyms are discouraged in anatomy and clinical practice, a number remain in common use. Articles are sought on these scientific pioneers whose names live on
  • Portrait of Anatomist/Clinician*
    Short article on the life and contribution of a famous 'clinical anatomist' from the past
  • Short historic article*
    Short article on an aspect of the history of tha anatomy
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Book Reviews
  • Abstracts

*Peer-reviewed categories.

Manuscript Preparation

The Editors of Clinical Anatomy wish to develop submission of articles via secure web sites. Authors wishing to use this method are advised to contact the Editor-in-Chief or the BACA Editor, as appropriate, before preparing their manuscript. The format for preparation of manuscripts for electronic submission is the same as that described below for submission of manuscripts on paper.

The manuscript should be typed double-spaced throughout on one side of bond or heavybodied paper 8 1/2" ?11" (22 ?28 cm) with at least a 1" (2.5 cm) margin on all sides. Number all manuscript pages consecutively, beginning with the title page. Submit the original and two copies of all elements. Please also submit an electronic version of text on a 3 1/2 inch PC compatible diskette.

  • Do not hyphenate words at the end of lines.
  • Do not begin sentences with abbreviations.
  • Spell out the word Figure in the text except when it appears in parentheses: Figure 2, (Figs. 4?).
  • Anatomical terms must conform with those set forth in Terminologica Anatomica(1998) Stuttgart: Thieme translated to English as used in standard English language textbooks, and eponyms, if used, must appear in parentheses alongside the TA term.
  • Spell nontechnical terms according to recommendations in the current Webster's International Dictionary. American spelling will be used (e.g., center, analyzed).
  • Always spell out numbers when they stand as the first word in a sentence; abbreviations may not follow such numbers. Numbers indicating time, weight, and measurements are to be in Arabic numerals when followed by abbreviations (e.g., 2 mm; 1 sec; 3 ml). In general, write out the numbers one to ten in the text. All higher numbers should be given as numerals.
  • Write dates as follows:
         October 11, 1995

The manuscript should have a uniform style and be submitted in finished form exactly as the author wishes it to appear in print. It should consist of subdivisions in the following sequence.

Title Page
Abstract
Text
      Introduction
      Materials and Methods
      Results
      Discussion
References
Footnotes
Tables
Legends

Start each subdivision on a new page.

Title Page. The first page of the manuscript should include:

  • Complete title of paper
  • Type of article (e.g., original communication, research article, review article, etc.)
  • Titles for all editorial features (i.e., descriptive titles for all Editorials, Letters-to-the-Editor, Book Reviews, etc.)
  • Each author's name
  • Institution from which paper emanated, with city, state, and zip code. Each affiliation should be listed as a separate entity, with a superscript number that links it to the individual author.
    For example: A. Smith1, B. Jones1, C. Thomas2, and D. Williams1,2*
    1Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
    2Department of Pediatrics, Montreal Children's Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
  • Total number of figures and tables
  • Abbreviated title (running headline) not to exceed 48 letters and spaces
  • Name, address, telephone and telefax numbers, and e-mail address for Corresponding Author (person to whom the proof is to be sent). The correspondence address will appear as an asterisked footnote. Designate one author for each paper. For example:
    *Correspondence to: Dr. Peter H. Dangerfield, Department of Human Anatomy and Cell Biology, The University of Liverpool, New Medical School, Ashton Street, Liverpool, L69 3GE UK. E-Mail:spine92@liv.ac.uk

Abstract. Submit an abstract of 250 words or less that will serve in lieu of a concluding summary and when published will precede the introductory section of the text. The abstract must be written in complete sentences, and succinctly state the objectives, experimental design of the paper, the principal observations and conclusions; and be intelligible without reference to the rest of the paper.

Key words should be included with the abstract and should not, in total, exceed 85 letters and spaces; nor should they repeat terms used in the title. Key words should be set in lower case (except for essential capitals), separated by a semicolon.

References.

Wiley's Journal Styles Are Now in EndNote
EndNote is a software product that we recommend to our journal authors to help simplify and streamline the research process. Using EndNote's bibliographic management tools, you can search bibliographic databases, build and organize your reference collection, and then instantly output your bibliography in any Wiley journal style.
Download Reference Style for this Journal: If you already use EndNote, you can download the reference style for this journal.
How to Order: To learn more about EndNote, or to purchase your own copy, click here.
Technical Support: If you need assistance using EndNote, contact endnote@isiresearchsoft.com, or visit www.endnote.com/support.

All references must be cited in the text. References in the text to the literature should be made by author's name, followed by year of publication:

. . . studies by Taitz (2000) reveal . . .
. . . studies by Ma and Lozanoff (1999) reveal . . .
. . . Studies by Wadu et al. (1997) reveal . . .
. . . an earlier report (Hines, 1993) . .
. . . earlier reports (Valojerdy and Hogg, 1989; Abu-Hijleh and Scothorne, 1994) . . .
. . . earlier reports (Lee et al., 1998) reveal . . .

When references are made to more than one paper by the same author, published in the same year, they are to be designated in the text as (Parke, 1991a,b) and in the literature list as follows:

Parke WW. 1991a. Intrinisic vasculature of the lumbosacral spinal nerve roots. Orthopedics 217:337?87.

Parke WW. 1991b. The significance of venous return impairment in ischemic radiculopathy and myelopathy. Orthop Clin N Amer 163:315?26.

Any references to personal communications or submitted manuscripts should be listed as unpublished communications in the text and not listed in reference section. Any reference to personal communications must be accompanied by permission from the source.

Literature cited is to be arranged alphabetically by authors. Abbreviations of journal titles follows those used in Index Medicus. Format follows the style described below and punctuation matches the examples listed in the sample references.

Citation for a standard journal article: Author's name(s), year of publication, article title, journal title (abbreviated), volume number, inclusive pages:

McGinn JS, Sim I, Bennett NK, McDonald SW. 2000. Observations on multiple sperm granulomas in the rat epididymis following vasectomy. Clin Anat 13:185-194.

Citation for a standard book: Author's name(s), year of publication, book title, place of publication, publisher, inclusive pages or total pages:

Ellis H, Logan B, Dixon A. 1999. Human cross-sectional anatomy: atlas of body sections, CT and MRI images. 2nd Ed. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann, p 1-245.

Citations with variable components: Editor's name(s), year of publication, chapter title, book title, volume/edition, place of publication, publisher, inclusive pages or total pages:

Whitehouse GH, Worthington BS. (eds.) 1996. Techniques in diagnostic imaging. 2nd Ed. Oxford: Blackwell Science. 526 p.

Wallace WA. 1993. Recurrent instability of the shoulder and its management. In: Kelly IG, editor. The practice of shoulder surgery. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann. p 163-179.

Williams, P.L., R. Warwick, M. Dyson and L.H. Bannister (eds.) 1989 Interior of the cranium. In Gray's Anatomy. 37th Ed. New York: Churchill Livingstone, pp. 360?66.

Reference Verification. The Editorial offices attempt to verify each reference citation. Authors are urder to supply original photocopies from the publication of each reference cited that includes the authors, year, title, journal, volume and page numbers. This form of validation will expedite publication and should accompany the final revision.

Footnotes. Number footnotes to the text consecutively. The corresponding numbers must be clearly indicated in the text. Additional references to the identical footnote must be numbered with the next consecutive number; for example:

2Material used for this experiment was provided by . . .
3See footnote 2, page . . .

Type footnotes to a table directly beneath the table and number them 1, 2, 3, etc. They must not be numbered in sequence with text footnotes.

Tables. All tables must be cited in the text and have titles. Table titles should be complete but brief. Information other than that defining the data should be presented as footnotes. Since tabular material is expensive to reproduce, it should be simple and uncomplicated, with as few vertical and horizontal rules as possible.

Figures. All figures must be cited in the text and must have legends. Since reproduction of illustrations is costly, authors should limit the number of figures to that which adequately presents the findings.

Placement of Figures/Tables. The placement of figures and tables must be clearly indicated in the margin of each revision. Figures and tables may appear within the text in sequential order, or may be arranged into plates at the end of the text. Figures should be submitted at size and magnification for printing.

Illustrations. Anatomy is a morphological and functional science with clinical significance. Support of its teaching by this journal depends upon clear illustrations of high quality.

Original illustrations and two sets of good-contrast photographic copies, for review purposes, must be submitted with the manuscript.

  • All illustrations must be submitted in complete and finished form with adequate labeling.
  • To ensure good resolution, authors are advised to submit illustrations of the size they would wish printed. Lines and lettering must be large and dense enough to remain legible after the figure is reduced to one-column width (approx. 8.25 cm or 3.25 in) or two-column width (approx. 16 cm or 6 in). The journal encourages submitting original figures of this size.
  • Authors planning to store illustrations electronically should note the advice given later in "Electronic Submission of Accepted Articles."
  • If the original drawings are too large for shipment, high-quality photographic prints should be submitted.
  • Photocopies of illustrations made on office duplicating machines are not acceptable for review.
  • The reverse side of each illustration should indicate: author's name; figure number; top side of illustration; reduction requested; "review copy" on those copies intended only for reviewers.
  • Do not fasten illustrations with paper clips, staples, etc., since they will mark the surface of the illustration.
  • Illustrations should be shipped flat and protected by heavy cardboard.

Black-and-White Prints. Prints should be on white, non-matte paper. To achieve optimum halftone quality, photographic prints submitted for reproduction must be of adequate contrast; and when more than one print is included in a single figure, they should be of similar density and tone to prevent loss of detail.

Color Prints. Color prints or transparencies are acceptable for reproduction. However, in the latter instance the frame of the transparency should be marked to indicate the area that can safely be cropped to arrive at the critical image area that is to appear in the final printing. The cost of all color illustrations will be charged to the author. The charge for one page is $800. Second, and subsequent pages, up to four, will cost $400 each. The color slide should be supplied in addition to the color print.

Line Drawings. Figures should be drawn with black ink on medium-weight white paper or lightweight artboard. To reduce weight and postal charges, photographic prints may be submitted in lieu of original drawings. The artwork should be sharp and black to achieve maximum contrast.

Use "stippling" and "hatching" techniques to achieve tonal quality. Avoid the use of shading (pencil, wash, or airbrush) for a tonal effect unless the drawing is to be reproduced as a halftone with its attendant gray-tint background. If original graphs are submitted, they should be drawn on blue- ruled paper; colors other than the blue will reproduce.

Topic for Debate

This occasional series aims to stimulate discussion of controversial topics, mainly in medical education. Each "Topic" includes an invited lead paper and comments from three or four contributors, of differing viewpoints. Suggestions for future topics and offers of contributions are welcomed by the editors.

Viewpoint

An analysis of contemporary problems and situations that offer new perspectives on the topic. It should consist of subdivisions in the following sequence:

  • Title Page
  • Abstract
  • Body
  • References
Problems in Diagnostic Imaging

The aim of the series is to interest anatomists and clinicians in the value of the newer methods of imaging in the study of anatomy and in the exploration of the borderlands of anatomy, normal and abnormal human development, and clinical medicine.

Each problem should be based on one or more high quality images, on which readers are invited to identify labeled features, and to interpret the appearances seen. It should adopt the following subdivisions:

Title, Abstract and Key words: These should not give the game away, but should inidicate the general area/organ/system examined.
Body: This focuses on identification of labeled features in the images, with subsidiary questions on methodology and interpretation.
Answers and Commentary
References
Legends: Since these will appear with the associated images, they should be phrased in general terms only.

The Clinical Conundrum

The purpose of the conundrum is:

  • to act as an educational stimulus in the exchange of current information between anatomists and clinicians;
  • to present puzzling clinical material that is original, or mostly unknown, with visual reinforcement;
  • to further establish the Journal as a forum for matters of clinical-anatomical interest.

A Clinical Conundrum should meet the following requirements:

  • be centered about a clinical case which presents somewhat of a diagnostic dilemma (puzzle);
  • be solved by making a diagnosis elucidated by recognizing or remembering underlying anatomic principles;
  • be centered about an illustration of good quality.

Most, if not all cases, will have aspects that will require consideration of several different anatomic areas that, blended together, will explain the clinical presentation.

Clinical Vignettes

This series provides a vehicle to enable clinicians to present a short case report (about a page in the journal) which illustrates a clinical point and a point of anatomical interest. Illustrations are encouraged but not essential. It should adopt the following subdivisions:

  • Title and Key words
  • Body
  • References
  • Legend (if accompanied by illustration)
Behind the Eponym
Portrait of Anatomist/Clinician
Short Historic Article

Authors of historic articles should follow the instructions for original articles including submission of Title Page, Abstract and Key Words, Text, References, Footnotes, Tables and Legends. Finished articles should occupy no more than eight pages in the journal. The text should contain an Introduction. Authors should consider whether standard subdivision of the text into Materials and Methods, Results, and Discussion might be appropriate. The Editors recognize that with historic material some flexibility regarding layout of the text may be necessary.

Review and Production Process

Upon receipt, each manuscript is sent to two or more experts for review. The review process is confidential. We expect reviewers to protect the confidentiality of each manuscript, and we do not disclose the identity of reviewers or any confidential material they provide the editorial offices.

Proofs. A single set of pages and illustration proofs will be sent to the author. All corrections should be marked clearly, directly on page proofs.

Reprints. Reprints may be purchased at prices quoted on the reprint order form. Reprint orders should be returned with the proofs. It is important to order initially a sufficient quantity of reprints, since the price is substantially higher if they are ordered after the paper has been published.


Electronic Submission of Accepted Articles

Authors are requested to deliver the final accepted version of their manuscripts on diskette.

Storage medium. 3 1/2" (preferred) or 5 1/4" diskette in IBM MS-DOS, Windows, or Macintosh format.

Software and format. Microsoft Word 6.0 is preferred, although manuscripts prepared using any other microcomputer word processor are acceptable. Do not use desktop publishing software such as Aldus PageMaker or Quark XPress. If you prepared your manuscript using one of these programs, export the text to a word processing format.

Format. Keep the document as simple as possible. Refrain from any complex formatting.

File name. Submit the text and tables of each manuscript as a single file. Name each file with your last name (up to eight letters). Text files should be given the three-letter extension that identifies the file format. Macintosh users should maintain the MS-DOS "eight dot three" file-naming convention.

Diskette label. Label all diskettes with your name, the file name, and the word processing program and version used.

Paper copy. The diskette must be accompanied by hard copy printout. If the diskette and paper copy differ, the paper copy will be considered the definitive version.

Illustrations Submission of electronic illustrations is encouraged, but not required. Submit illustrations as separate files from the text files, on separate diskettes or cartridges, 3 1/2" diskettes, Iomega Zip, and 5 1/4" 44- or 88-MB SyQuest. At authors' request, cartridges and diskettes will be returned after publication. Resolution: Journal quality reproduction will require grayscale and color files at resolutions yielding approximately 300 ppi. Bitmapped line art should be submitted at resolutions yielding 600-1200 ppi.

For additional information contact:

Patrick Snajder
Production Editor
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Phone: (201) 748-8807
Fax: (201) 748-6825
E-mail: psnajder@wiley.com
Guidelines for Electronic Submission are also available at http://www.interscience.wiley.com


Editorial Board
E D I T O R - I N - C H I E F
Stephen W. Carmichael

Department of Anatomy
Mayo Clinic
Rochester, Minnesota 55905

A A C A    E D I T O R
Robert J. Spinner

Department of Neurologic Surgery
Mayo Clinic
Rochester, Minnesota 55905

B A C A     E D I T O R
Stuart McDonald

Anatomy Department
University of Glasgow
Glasgow, Scotland G12 8QQ

Founding Editor: Ralph Ger (1988?991)

A S S O C I A T E     E D I T O R S
Seyedhossein Aharinejad
Vienna, Austria

Robert D. Acland
Louisville, Kentucky

Anne M.R. Agur
Toronto, Canada

F. David Aker
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Peter C. Amadio
Rochester, Minnesota

Robert H. Anderson
London, United Kingdom

Johannes M. Boon
Pretoria, South Africa

David Bowsher
Liverpool, United Kingdom

Carmine Clemente
Los Angeles, California

Gene L. Colborn
Augusta, Georgia

John M. Cooke
Worcester, Massachusetts

Arthur F. Dalley II
Nashville, Tennessee

Peter H. Dangerfield
Liverpool, United Kingdom

Raffaele De Caro
Padova, Italy

Adrian K. Dixon
Cambridge, United Kingdom

Harold Ellis
London, United Kingdom

Christian J. Fontaine
Lille, France

Raymond F. Gasser
New Orleans, Louisiana

Ralph Ger
Great Neck, New York

Daniel O. Graney
Seattle, Washington

N. Alan Green
Norfolk, United Kingdom

Malcolm Howard Hast
Chicago, Illinois

Berend Hillen
Nijmegen, The Netherlands

David A. Hogg
Grenada, West Indies

David B. Jenkins
Alton, Illinois

D. Gareth Jones
Dunedin, New Zealand

Jan L. Kasperbauer
Rochester, Minnesota

Subramaniam Krishnan
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

J. Thomas Lambrecht
Basle, Switzerland

Robert J. Leonard
Irvine, California

Scott Lozanoff
Honolulu, Hawaii

Vishy Mahadevan
London, United Kingdom

Pasuk Mahakkanukrauh
Chaingmai, Thailand

W. Stanley Monkhouse
Derby, United Kingdom

Keith L. Moore
Toronto, Canada

Janusz Mory?/B>
Gdañsk, Poland

Robert P. Myers
Rochester, Minnesota

Richard L.M. Newell
Cardiff, Wales

Wojciech Pawlina
Rochester, Minnesota

Kathryn E. Peek
Houston, Texas

Sepp Poisel
Innsbruck, Austria

Andrew T. Raftery
Sheffield, United Kingdom

Cornelius Rosse
Seattle, Washington

Tatsuo Sato
Tokyo, Japan

Kapil S. Satyapal
Westville, South Africa

Louise Scheuer
London, United Kingdom

Hans-Martin Schmidt
Bonn, Germany

H. Norman Schnitzlein
Tampa, Florida

Ray J. Scothorne
Glasgow, United Kingdom

Carol E.H. Scott-Conner
Iowa City, Iowa

Mark F. Seifert
Indianapolis, Indiana

James P. Shaw
Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Shizuko Shoumura
Gifu, Japan

Reon Somana
Bangkok, Thailand

Phillip R. Waggoner
Miami, Florida

Marvin Wagner
Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Andreas H. Weiglein
Graz, Austria

Peter L.T. Willan
Cheshire, United Kingdom

Gary E. Wise
Baton Rouge, Louisiana



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