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Call for Papers "Chinese Medicine"
ISSN Online: 2151-1926
Dear ,
This e-mail is sent from Chinese Medicine (CM), a peer-reviewed open-access journal. We would like to invite you to submit related papers to us via the Paper Submission System.
Most popular papers in CM
> Bikram Yoga as a Countermeasure of Bone Loss in Women Author(s): Apurba Mukherjee, Prithwis Mukherjee, Robert R. Rude
> Polyphenol Content and Antioxidant Effects in Herb Teas Author(s): Shizuo Toda
> In Vitro Studies on Sida Cordifolia Linn for Anthelmintic and Antioxidant Properties Author(s): Rajesh Singh Pawar, Ankit Jain, Preeti Sharma, Pradeep Kumar Chaurasiya, Pradeep Kumar Singour
Aims & Scope (not limited to the following fields)
• Diagnostics of Chinese Medicine
• Acupuncture and Moxibustion and Tuina of Chinese Medicine
• Basic Theories of Chinese Medicine
• Clinical Foundation of Chinese Medicine
• Ethno Medicine
• History and Literature of Chinese Medicine
• Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology of Chinese Medicine
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• Open Access
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Editor-in-Chief
Prof. Maythem Saeed (University of California, San Francisco, USA) CM Editorial Office E-mail: cm@scirp.org
Place of Public Relation: Scientific Research Publishing Inc., P. O. BOX 54821, Irvine CA 92619-4821, USA. Place of Customer Service: Building 5, Headquarters Space of Optical Valley, Tangxun Lake North Road #38, East Lake High-Tech Development Zone, Wuhan 430223, Hubei Province, China.
Register now for "Translate! 2014", a symposium co-organized byScience Translational Medicine and the Berlin-Brandenburg Center for Regenerative Therapies in Berlin, Germany, May 22-23, 2014.
An orally available, shelf-stable pan-morbillivirus inhibitor targeting a viral polymerase effectively treats ferrets infected with a lethal dose of a measles-like virus.
U.S. national networks must set achievable modest goals and match them with reasonable resources in order to facilitate translational medicine projects.
Along with scientific and regulatory issues, the translation of cell and tissue therapies in the routine clinical practice needs to address standardization and cost-effectiveness through the definition of suitable manufacturing paradigms.
A newly discovered candidate gene for a devastating pediatric vascular disease encodes an aberrant form of adenosine deaminase 2, which creates an inflammatory environment.