• Injury · Dec 2017

    Review

    The top 100 cited of injury-international journal of the care of the injured: A bibliometric analysis.

    • Peng Luo, Ding Xu, Jia Wu, Yi-Heng Chen, Roman Pfeifer, and Hans-Christoph Pape.
    • Department of Orthopedic Trauma Surgery, The second affiliated hospital and Yuying Children's hospital of Wenzhou Medical University, China; Department of Orthopedic Trauma Surgery, RWTH Aachen University, Germany; Department of Trauma Surgery, University of Zurich, Switzerland. Electronic address: luopeng19850019@163.com.
    • Injury. 2017 Dec 1; 48 (12): 2625-2633.

    BackgroundWith nearly 50 years' of development, Injury has become one of the leading journals in its specialty. The aim of this article is to identify, analyze the characteristics of the 100 most cited articles published by the journal to date.MethodWe searched the Thomson Reuters Web of Science Core Collection for citations of all articles published in Injury since its launch. For the Top 100 most frequently cited articles, title, author name, number of authors, publishing date, citation number, country of origin, institution, pages, number of reference, type of article, study topic, study design, funding source, and level of evidence of each clinical article were recorded and analyzed.ResultsOnly 50 self-citations were found in 12436 total citations of the top100 articles, fifty-four articles exceeded 100 citations. Total citations of the Top 100 articles ranged from 77 to 599. The Top 100 articles were published between 1973 and 2012, the mean authorship and institution number per paper was 3.92 and 1.84 respectively. The mean page number was 8.26 and the mean reference number was 45.2. England, Germany and Switzerland ranked the top three countries of origin. Among the T100 articles, there were 50 clinical studies, 5 basic researches, and 45 reviews. The most common study type was case series, and most common topics were bone reconstruction, trauma and bone fracture. The most common level of evidence was level Ⅳ.ConclusionsThis study may help researchers to find out the important information on the classic articles and provides useful insights for the authors who want to publish their research in Injury.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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