Instruction to Authors
Information for Manuscript Preparation
General:
Title Page:
The title page should contain the following elements in the following order:
Title of the paper. The title should not have subtitles or non-standard abbreviations and should not exceed 20 words.
Author(s) names with full first and last names (without qualifications).
Affiliations of all authors and institutions/addresses where work was performed.
E-mail address and phone number of at least one author to whom correspondence and reprint requests are to be addressed.
Information on institutional or corporate funding sources and acknowledgments of any kind.
Abstract Page:
Length of Manuscripts:
Original full-length research manuscripts (such as clinical trials, laboratory research, etc.). The pure text without abstract, figures, tables, references and legends should not contain more than 7500 words. References, tables, figures and legends are without restrictions. However, authors are asked to restrict the number of references to those essentially necessary for citations and further reading. Illustrations should be used for the reader’s benefit to assist understanding of the paper’s main statements and results.
Shorter papers of original work may have about 3500 words, thirty references and two tables and figures.
Review articles: A maximum of 9000 words should not be exceeded. References maximum 150. Topics should be arranged with the editors. Please refer to info (at) lnlpress.com.
Articles in column “Diabetic Perspectives” may have approximately 5000 words, two tables, two figures, and fifty references.
Comments: Maximum of 2500 words, two tables or figures, 20 references.
Letters to the editors: Not more than 2500 words, two illustrations, 20 references.
Case reports may have about 3500 words, two illustration and twenty references.
Reports on conferences, lectures, workshops may also have approximately 3500 words, two tables or figures and fifty references. The permissions of the cited authors must be available. A corresponding annotation must be submitted along with the report if their work is still unpublished.
Abbreviations:
Footnotes:
Figures and Tables:
References:
Journal articles:
1. Banerjee M, Bhonde RR. Islet generation from intra islet precursor cells of diabetic pancreas: In vitro studies depicting in vivo differentiation. JOP 2003. 4(4):137-145.
For articles in press, substitute indications for volume and pages by ‘In press.’ The same applies to discussion articles, working papers and abstracts (substitute ‘Discussion article’, ‘Working paper’ or ‘Abstract’). Unpublished work, personal communications etc. should appear in the text where used but not in the references. Arrange your other references as follows:
Books:
Articles in Books:
Reports on Conferences, Workshops etc.:
The Text:
The structure of papers containing original research should contain the following elements: Introduction, presentation of purposes and methods, the study section, the presentation of the results, conclusion and a discussion. Further sections are possible. Sections should not be numbered. If possible avoid subsections. If you prefer to use subsections, do not use more than two levels. The text should be prepared according to conventional scientific practice. To this end author(s) should consult the suggestions of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE), which may be visited here.
Editor
MD, PhD
Abbreviation Title
Rev Diabet Stud
Frequency
Bibliographic Listings
- Elsevier - SCOPUS
- Excerpta Medica / EMBASE
- EBSCO (Relevant Databases)
- EBSCO Discovery Service
- Google Scholar
- Index Copernicus
- J-Gate
- ProQuest (Relevant Databases
- Publons
- PubMed/Medline
- PubMed Central (PMC)
- SCImago (SJR)
- Crossref