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期刊名称:MYCOSES

ISSN:0933-7407
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://as.wiley.com/WileyCDA/Section/index.html
期刊网址:http://www.wiley.com/bw/journal.asp?ref=0933-7407
影响因子:4.377
主题范畴:DERMATOLOGY;    MYCOLOGY

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



About the journal

 

The journal provides an international forum for original papers in English on the pathogenesis, diagnosis, therapy, prophylaxis, and epidemiology of fungal infectious diseases in humans and animals as well as on the biology of pathogenic fungi. Prominent mycoses of the skin have always been the domain of dermatology. Otorhinolaryngologists, gastroenterologists, and gynecologists are confronted with mycoses of the mucous membranes.

Medical mycology as part of medical microbiology is advancing rapidly. Effective therapeutic strategies are already available in chemotherapy and are being further developed. Their application requires reliable laboratory diagnostic techniques, which, in turn, result from mycological basic research. Opportunistic mycoses vary greatly in their clinical and pathological symptoms, because the underlying disease of a patient at risk decisively determines their symptomatology and progress. Therefore, case histories are highly informative. Short communications on mycological topics complete the original articles.The journal mycoses is, therefore, of interest to scientists in fundamental mycological research, mycological laboratory diagnosticians, clinicians in all fields, and veterinarians.

 Indexing and Abstracting

This journal is covered by

Mycoses


Instructions to Authors
GENERAL

Mycoses is dedicated to the publication of manuscripts on topics concerning medical or veterinary mycology. Studies on plant pathology or mycological papers on fungi not related to human or veterinary medicine do not lie within the scope of mycoses and will not be accepted.

Manuscripts may be published as original communication of normal or short length (Short communication). Reports on single cases (Case reports) are considered as Letters to the editor. The submission of review articles both of the mini-review and the full-length type is particularly encouraged. Only papers submitted in English will be accepted (this does not exclude the Latin text required for the description of new species or genera).

The editors reserve the right not to accept papers unless adherence to the principles given in the Declaration of Helsinki and the Guiding Principles in the Care and Use of Animals (DHEW Publication NIH) is clear.

No charge is made for publication but authors will be required to pay for extensive alterations to agreed papers at proof stage.

Early View

Mycoses is covered by Blackwell Publishing's Early View service. Early View articles are complete full-text articles published online in advance of their publication in a printed issue. Articles are therefore available as soon as they are ready, rather than having to wait for the next scheduled print issue. Early View articles are complete and final. They have been fully reviewed, revised and edited for publication, and the authors' final corrections have been incorporated. Because they are in final form, no changes can be made after online publication. The nature of Early View articles means that they do not yet have volume, issue or page numbers, so Early View articles cannot be cited in the traditional way. They are therefore given a Digital Object Identifier (DOI), which allows the article to be cited and tracked before it is allocated to an issue. After print publication, the DOI remains valid and can continue to be used to cite and access the article.

MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSION

Manuscripts are submitted to mycoses online, i.e. electronically, from the corresponding author's Mycoses ScholarOne Manuscript (formerly known as Manuscript Central) account. You will need your files in an electronic format, an Internet connection, and a user ID and password for the site. To begin a new submission, go to http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/myc and log in or create an account to get your user ID and password. Full instructions are provided on the site.

If assistance is needed, the Editorial Office can be contacted and will readily provide any help users need to upload their manuscripts.

Mycoses c/o Editorial Office
Erika Ratzinger
Vohburgerstraße 13
80687 München, Germany
Phone: +49 (0)89 546 624 35
Fax: +49 (0)89 583 824
E-mail: mycoses.muenchen@t-online.de

Electronic submission
Manuscripts should be uploaded as Word (.doc) or Rich Text Format (.rft) files plus separate figure files. JPEG, TIFF or EPS files are acceptable for submission, but only high-resolution JPEG, TIFF or EPS files are suitable for printing. The files will be automatically converted to a PDF document on upload and will be used for the review process. The text file must contain the entire manuscript including title page, abstract, text, references, tables, and figure legends, but no embedded figures. Figure tags should be included in the file.

Manuscripts should be formatted as described in mycoses’ Author Guidelines (below). When preparing your file, please use only standard fonts such as Times, Times New Roman or Arial for text, and Symbol font for Greek letters, to avoid inadvertent character substitutions. In particular, please do not use Japanese or other Asian fonts. Do not use automated or manual hyphenation.

For more information on preparing manuscripts for online submission, please read the detailed instructions at  http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/myc. Additional help is available by emailing support@scholarone.com/.

Authors may provide names of potential reviewers for their manuscript. All acceptable material submitted for publication is forwarded to the Deputy Editor in charge of the particular field who together with at least two further referees makes a judgement on the paper. The votes of the independent referees as well a preliminary suggestion of acceptance or rejection is forwarded by the Deputy Editor to the Editor-in-Chief who makes the final decision. Authors must inform the Editor of any possible conflict of interest capable of influencing their judgement, and if necessary, a disclaimer will be included.

Revised manuscripts must be uploaded within 2 months of authors being notified of conditional acceptance pending satisfactory revision. Authors resubmitting manuscripts should follow the same procedures as for submission of new manuscripts.  If accepted, papers become the copyright of the journal.

After acceptance please make sure that the final manuscript and figure files are uploaded. The figures must be high-resolution scans (JPEG, TIFF or EPS files). Detailed information on our digital illustration standards is available at authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/illustration.asp.

COPYRIGHT ASSIGNMENT

Authors are no longer required to assign copyright in their paper. Instead authors are required to assign the exclusive licence to publish their paper to Blackwell Publishing and mycoses. Assignment of the exclusive licence is a condition of publication and papers will not be passed to the publisher for production unless licence has been assigned. (Papers subject to government or Crown copyright are exempt from this requirement). Please download the Copyright Transfer Agreement form here and send it to the Production Editor via email: myc@wiley.com or fax: +65 6511 8288.

TEXT

Authors should aim for a concise readable style. Spelling should follow the Concise Oxford Dictionary, and The Oxford Dictionary for Writers and Editors. The Editor reserves the right to make corrections, both literary and technical, to the papers.

All pages must be numbered consecutively in the upper right-hand corner of each page. Starting with the title page as p.1, the pages should be numbered in the following order: title page, summary and key words, text, acknowledgements, references, tables, figure legends.

The following items should each start on a separate page.

Title Page
This should bear (1) the title, (2) the names of all authors, (3) the institutions of origin with brief addresses, (4) a short title of not more than 50 characters (including spaces) to be used as a running head, (5) a list of up to eight key words for indexing purposes, and (6) the name and full postal address (with phone and fax numbers and e-mail address) of the author who will be responsible for reading the proofs (the corresponding author). The corresponding author must keep the mycoses office informed of any change in details until the paper is published. Authors should keep a copy of their manuscript.

Summary
Normally in less than 210 words, this should indicate clearly the scope and main conclusions of the paper. Original articles should have a structured abstract, comprising the five headings: Background, Objectives, Patients/Methods, Results and Conclusions.

Main Text
Papers should be divided into sections headed (1) introduction, (2) materials and methods (or patients and methods/subjects and methods if human patients/subjects were used), (3) results, (4) discussion and (5) acknowledgements. Avoid an excess of sub-headings - two further divisions, if necessary, should be adequate.

The introduction should explain why the work was done and briefly introduce the scope and contents of the paper. Essential details should be included in materials and methods, including experimental design and statistical analysis. Results should be recorded in the past tense. The discussion should present the author's results in the broader context of other work on the subject. Acknowledgements should be as brief as possible.

REFERENCES

Please verify your references before submission and send them as a plain, unstructured list. We recommend the use of a tool such as EndNote or Reference Manager for reference management and formatting. Avoid using 'endnote' programs for the electronic copy. All references must be cited in numerical order in the text following the Vancouver system. The numbers of references should appear in the text in brackets e.g. [1, 21] or [1-4]. If giving the names of authors in the text the following form should be used: Brown & Smith [1] or Brown et al. [2] if there are more than two authors. Unpublished observations and personal communications may be included in the text only.

The reference list should show the references in numerical order as they appear in the text. References should include the following: (1) authors (surname followed by initials), (2) year, (3) title of (a) article or (b) chapter, (4) editors (if a book), (5) title of (a) journal or (b) book, (6) volume number, (7) place of publication and name of publisher (if a book), and (8) first and last page numbers of (a) article or (b) chapter. Journal titles should be abbreviated according to the system adopted in Index Medicus.

The following format should be used:

Journal articles
(List all authors if six or fewer, list the first three then add et al. if there are seven or more).
1 Bloch B, Kretzel A. Econazole nitrate in the treatment of Candida vaginitis. S Afr Med J 1984; 58: 314-472.

Books
2 Weinstein L, Swartz MN. Pathogenic properties of invading microorganisms. In: Sodeman, W. A. Jr & Sodeman, W. A. (eds) Pathogenic Physiology: Mechanisms of Disease. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders, 1974: 457-72.

Work that has been submitted but not accepted for publication should not appear in the reference list but may appear in the text as unpublished observations. Work that has been accepted but not published should be included in the reference list stating the journal in which it is to appear followed by '(in press)'. Further details should be supplied as soon as possible.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

There are no keywords required. The references must be integrated into the text (Author AA et al., Journal 2002; 1: 242) or (Book author AA. Book Title, 2nd Edition, Publisher, Place, 1996).

TABLES

These must be numbered consecutively with arabic numerals and typed on separate sheets carrying an appropriate legend and presented in a way that makes the table self-explanatory.

Numerical results should be expressed as means with the relevant standard errors and/or statistically significant differences, quoting probability levels (P-values). Three significant figures are usually sufficient for mean values and standard errors should be quoted two or three more decimals than the mean.
The only lines appearing in the table should be horizontal and all decimals should be aligned in columns. The placement of all tables should be indicated in the text, being referred to as Table 1 or Tables 2 and 3.

FIGURES

Figures should be numbered in sequence in Arabic numerals as they appear in the text. Labels, lettering and symbols etc. must be professionally prepared and should be uniform. Lines should be of sufficient thickness to stand reduction (no less than 4 mm wide for a 50% reduction), and letters should be a minimum of 14 pt Times New Roman or an equivalent size. Acceptable symbols for experimental points are ¡, r, o, ˜, p, ¢. The symbols + and × will not be accepted.

Legends should be typed on a separate sheet and consist of a short title together with a brief explanatory paragraph. The legend must make the meaning of each figure understandable without further reference to the text. Photomicrographs should state the original magnification.

The position of all figures should be indicated in the text and should be referred to as Fig. 1 or Figs 1 and 3. Figure 1 should be written out in full if at the beginning of a sentence.

Colour photos can be reproduced in black and white (with a possible loss of contrast). It is the policy of Mycoses for authors to pay the full cost for the reproduction of their colour artwork. Therefore, please note that if there is colour artwork in your manuscript when it is accepted for publication, Blackwell Publishing require you to complete and return a colour work agreement form before your paper can be published. This form can be downloaded as a PDF from the internet. If you are unable to access the internet, or are unable to download the form please contact the Editorial Office and they will be able to e-mail or fax the form to you. Once completed please return the form to the Production Editor. Any article received by Blackwell Publishing with colour artwork will not be published until the form has been returned.

Electronic Artwork
Vector graphics (e.g. line artwork) should be saved in Encapsulated Postscript Format (EPS), and bitmap files (e.g. photographs) in Tagged Image File Format (TIFF). Please do not use any pixel-oriented programmes. Scanned figures (only in TIFF format) should have a resolution of 300 dpi (halftone) or 600 to 1200 dpi (line drawings) in relation to the reproduction size. Colour graphics should be created using the CMYK colour palette (print colours), not RGB (monitor colours). There is a charge for alterations to figures when carried out by the publisher.

Full details of submission of figures in electronic format are available at: authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/illustration.asp

If submitted as hardcopy, figures should be submitted as glossy prints in duplicate and preferably with a transparent overlay for protection. The overlay should be used to indicate masking instructions, lettering or arrows. Each figure should bear the number, author's name and an arrow to indicate the top in soft pencil on the reverse. If figures have more than one part, each part should be labelled (preferably) in the top left-hand corner with lower-case letters in parentheses e.g. a figure with two parts would be labelled (a) and (b). In the text this should be referred to as Fig. 1a or Figs 2a, b.
Figures should be planned to fit the printed column, i.e. 7.9 cm wide for single column and 16.5 cm wide for double column.
Photographs can be up to twice the reproduction size and must be unmounted glossy prints showing good detail and moderate contrast.

UNITS, SYMBOLS and ABBREVIATIONS

SI (Système International) units should be used and should conform with the lists printed Units, Symbols and Abbreviations - A Guide for Biological and Medical Editors and Authors 4th edn as published by the Royal Society of Medicine. Nomenclature of disease should follow the International Classification of Disease, published by the World Health Organization, as far as possible.

When first mentioned, cumbersome medical names should be abbreviated for later reference in the text. Latin bi-nominals should abbreviate the genera to the initial letter after the first mention unless it begins a sentence.

Doses of drugs should be given as unit weight per body weight, e.g. mmol kg-1. Rates should be expressed with negative indices. Concentrations should be given in terms of molarity, e.g. mmol l-1, not mM.

Numerals are to be used from 10 upwards; and the 24-hour clock, e.g. 21.00 hours, should be used.

MATERIALS

The source of all materials used should be given stating company, city of location and country.

Verification of the identity of living specimens used must take place through sequencing, or by consultation of taxonomists working at a reference centre. Specimens analyzed must remain accessible for later reference. Strains should be deposited in one of the major culture collections, and sequences in a public data bank. Collection and sequence numbers must be cited in the text. It is recommended that new taxa are deposited in MycoBank. Descriptions of new taxa must comply with the rules of the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature.

PROOFS

The corresponding author will receive an email alert containing a link to a web site. A working e-mail address must therefore be provided for the corresponding author. The proof can be downloaded as a PDF (portable document format) file from this site. Acrobat Reader will be required in order to read this file. This software can be downloaded (free of charge) from the following web site: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html.

This will enable the file to be opened, read on screen and printed out in order for any corrections to be added. Further instructions will be sent with the proof. Hard copy proofs will be posted if no e-mail address is available. Excessive changes made by the author in the proofs, excluding typesetting errors, will be charged separately.

OFFPRINTS

A PDF offprint of the online published article will be provided free of charge to the corresponding author, and may be distributed subject to the Publisher's terms and conditions. Paper offprints of the printed published article may be purchased if ordered via the method stipulated on the instructions that will accompany the proofs. Printed offprints are posted to the correspondence address given for the paper unless a different address is specified when ordered. Note that it is not uncommon for printed offprints to take up to eight weeks to arrive after publication of the journal.

AUTHOR MATERIAL ARCHIVES POLICY

Please note that unless specifically requested, Blackwell Publishing will dispose of all hardcopy or electronic material submitted two months after publication. If you require the return of any material submitted, please inform the editorial office or production editor as soon as possible if you have not yet done so.

AUTHOR SERVICES

NEW: Online production tracking is now available for your article through Wiley-Blackwell's Author Services: Author Services enables authors to track their article - once it has been accepted - through the production process to publication online and in print. Authors can check the status of their articles online and choose to receive automated e-mails at key stages of production. The author will receive an e-mail with a unique link that enables them to register and have their article automatically added to the system. Please ensure that a complete e-mail address is provided when submitting the manuscript. Visit authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor for more details on online production tracking and for a wealth of resources including FAQs and tips on article preparation, submission and more.


Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief

Hans Christian Korting
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
Dermatologische Klinik und Poliklinik
Frauenlobstrasse 9-11
80337 München, Germany
Phone: +49 89 5147 6203
Fax: +49 89 5160 6204
E-mail: mycoses.muenchen@t-online.de

Editor ex officio DMykG

Oliver A. Cornely
Medizinische Leitung | Zentrum f
ür Klinische Studien
Klinik I für Innere Medizin
Kerpener Str. 62 | 50937 Köln, Germany
Phone: +49 221 478 6494
Fax: +49 221 478 3611
E-mail: oliver.cornely@zks-koeln.de


Honorary Editors

Prof. Dr. Johannes Müller, Emmendingen, Germany
Dr. Yvonne M. Clayton, London, UK
Prof. Dr. Annemarie Polak-Wyss, Basel, Switzerland

Deputy Editors

Fungal Taxonomy, Systematics and Epidemiology
Prof. Dr. G. Sybren de Hoog, Utrecht, The Netherlands
E-mail: de.hoog@cbs.knaw.nl

Fungal Morphology
Prof. Dr. Martin Schaller, Tübingen, Germany
E-mail: Martin.schaller@med.uni-tuebingen.de

Molecular Mycology
Host Parasite Interaction: PD Dr. Michael Weig, Göttingen, Germany
E-mail: mweig@gwdg.de

Signal Transduction: Dr. Michael Kruppa, Washington, DC, USA
E-mail: mk67@georgetown.edu

Virulence Factors: PD Dr. Klaus Schröppel, Tübingen, Germany
E-mail: schroeppel@mikrobio.med.uni-erlangen.de

Laboratory Diagnostics
Prof. Dr. Reinhard Kappe, Nordhausen, Germany
E-mail: rkappe@haema.de

Animal Models and Antifungal Susceptibility
Prof. Dr. Andreas Groll, Münster, Germany
E-mail: grollan@mednet.uni-muenster.de

Dermatomycoses
Prof. Dr. Jochen Brasch, Kiel, Germany
E-mail: j.brasch@dermatology.uni-kiel.de

Prof. Dr. Gabriele Ginter-Hanselmayer, Graz, Austria
E-mail: Gabriele.ginter@meduni-graz.at

Prof. Dr. Peter Mayser, Giessen, Germany
E-mail: Peter.Mayser@derma.med.uni-giessen.de

Prof. Dr. Robert A. Schwartz, Newark, NJ, USA
E-mail: roschwar@cal.berkeley.edu

Prof. Dr. Jacek Szepietowski, Wroclaw, Poland
E-mail: jszepiet@derm.am.wroc.pl

ICU Systemic Mycoses
Prof. Dr. Carol A. Kauffman, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
E-mail: ckauff@umich.edu

Systemic Mycoses in Immunocompromised Patients
Prof. Dr. Oliver A. Cornely, Köln, Germany
E-mail: oliver.cornely@uni-koeln.de

Prof. Dr. Markus Ruhnke, Berlin, Germany
E-mail:  markus.ruhnke@charite.de

PD Dr. Andrew Ullmann, Mainz, Germany
E-mail: a.ullmann@3-med.klinik.uni-mainz.de

Mycotoxins and Mycotoxicoses
Prof. Dr. Ewald Usleber, Giessen, Germany
E-mail: Ewald.Usleber@vetmed.uni-giessen.de

Fungal Allergy
Prof. Dr. Reto Crameri, Davos, Switzerland
E-mail: crameri@siaf.unizh.ch

Prof. Dr. Hans F. Merk, Aachen, Germany
E-mail: hans.merk@post.rwth-aachen.de

Antimycotic Therapy
Prof. Dr. Herbert Hof, Mannheim, Germany
E-mail: herbert.hof@imh.ma.uni-heidelberg.de

Veterinary Mycology
Prof. Dr. Johann Bauer, Freising, Germany
E-mail: Johann.Bauer@wzw.tum.de

Editorial Office

Erika Ratzinger
Editorial Office Mycoses
Vohburgerstraße 13
80687 München, Germany
Phone: +49 89 5466 2435
Fax: +49 89 583824
E-mail: mycoses.muenchen@t-online.de

Book Reviews Editor

Prof. Dr. Hans Christian Korting
c/o Editorial Office Mycoses
Vohburgerstraße 13
80687 München, Germany
Phone: +49 89 5466 2435
Fax: +49 89 583824
E-mail: mycoses.muenchen@t-online.de

Journal Publishing Manager

Klaus Mickus
Blackwell Verlag GmbH
Rotherstrasse 21
10245 Berlin, Germany
Tel. +49 30 32 79 06-50
Fax +49 30 32 79 06-77
E-mail: kmickus@wiley.com



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