Guide for Authors
The Official Journal of the
American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons
JFAS Information for Authors
© ACFAS and D. Scot Malay, DPM, MSCE, FACFAS
Manuscript
Preparation and Submission Guidelines
All submissions to JFAS must be submitted electronically at
http://www.jfas.org/.
By selecting "Author's Corner" and "Manuscript Submission" at the JFAS Web site, you will arrive at the Elsevier electronic submission
page, the Elsevier Editing System at
http://ees.elsevier.com/jfas/. Authors will be guided stepwise through the creation
and uploading of the various files. When submitting a manuscript to Elsevier Editorial System (EES), authors need to provide an electronic
version of their manuscript. For this purpose original source files, not PDF files, are preferred. The author should specify a category
designation for the manuscript (full-length article or Tips, Quips and Pearls) and choose a set of classifications from the prescribed
list provided online. Authors may send queries concerning the submission process, manuscript status, or journal procedures to the Editorial
Office. Once the submission files are uploaded, the system automatically generates an electronic (PDF) proof, which is then used for
reviewing. All correspondence, including the Editor's decision and request for revisions, will be by e-mail, and logged in the EES.
Copyright Transfer Agreement: The Journal of Foot & Ankle Surgery considers for publication original articles only. Manuscripts
are accepted on the premise that they are submitted solely to this journal, and have not been published elsewhere. Work appearing in
The Journal of Foot & Ankle Surgery is copyrighted by the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons (ACFAS). Each author will be
required to sign a
copyright transfer agreement
(CTA). The
form
will be e-mailed once the manuscript is submitted on-line, and you can, at any time download the form by following the instruction described,
below. The form states:
- "In consideration of The Journal of Foot & Ankle Surgery reviewing my (our) submission, the undersigned
author(s) transfers, assigns, or otherwise conveys all copyright ownership to the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons (ACFAS)
in the event the work is published. The undersigned authors(s) guarantee to the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons that the
submission is the original work of the author(s). If any part of the submission is owned by another party, the authors(s) must attach
to this statement an assignment of copyright to the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons signed by the owner."
•
Every author, including the corresponding author and all co-authors, must submit a signed CTA to the Journal office as soon as possible
following submission of a manuscript for editorial consideration.
• The CTA can be downloaded from the "Author's Corner" section
of the JFAS webpage (
www.jfas.org/), by clicking on the "Manuscript Submission"
option, which links to the Elsevier Editorial System (
http://ees.elsevier.com/jfas/ ), where the form can be procured by
clicking on the "Copyright Transfer Agreement" option.
• The signed agreement/s can be returned to D. Scot Malay, Editor, JFAS,
via electronic mail (after scanning or digitally photographing the signed CTA) at
editorjfas@gmail.com, via telefax at
(215) 967-4463, or via standard mail at 2314 Waverly Street, Philadelphia, PA 19146, USA.
• No manuscript can be published
without first having the signed CTA/s on file in the Journal office, and authors are instructed to attend to this matter as soon as your
manuscript has been accepted for editorial consideration.
• In the event that a manuscript has only a single author, and that
author does not submit a signed CTA prior to the publication preparation deadline, then publication of the manuscript will be delayed
until the required signed CTA/s are on file in the Journal office.
• The Editor also reserves the right to discontinue editing
a manuscript, and hold peer review, if the signed Copyright Transfer Agreement/s is/are not on file in the Journal offices.
•
All accepted manuscripts become the permanent property of ACFAS and may not be published elsewhere without written permission from both
the author and ACFAS.
• Transfer of copyright to ACFAS implies transfer of all worldwide rights, including printed, electronic,
microfilm, and facsimile publication, unless specified otherwise.
Financial Disclosure and Conflict of Interest Statement:
Every author, including the corresponding author and all co-authors, must submit a signed
conflict
of interest statement to the Journal office, at the time of submission of a manuscript for editorial consideration. Authors
should disclose any financial arrangements they may have with any company whose product is pertinent to the submitted manuscript, or
with a company making a competing product. The information will be held in confidence while the paper is under review and will not influence
the blind peer review process. If the article is accepted for publication, a disclosure statement will appear with the article. The conflict
of interest statement can be downloaded from the "Author's Corner" section of the JFAS webpage (
www.jfas.org/),
by clicking on the "Manuscript Submission" option, which links to the Elsevier Editorial System (
http://ees.elsevier.com/jfas/
), where the form can be procured by clicking on the "Conflict of Interest Disclosure" option. The completed and signed statement/s can
be returned to D. Scot Malay, Editor, JFAS, via electronic mail (after scanning or digitally photographing the completed and signed statement/s)
at
editorjfas@gmail.com, via telefax at (215) 967-4463, or via standard mail at 2314 Waverly Street, Philadelphia, PA
19146, USA. No manuscript can be published without first having the conflict of interest disclosures on file in the Journal office.
General Format: General Format: Each page should be numbered consecutively, in the bottom right corner, with the title page designated
as page 1. The manuscript should be double-spaced, line-numbered, and left margin justified. The contents of your manuscript should include
the following sections in the following order:
For a full-text manuscript reporting a clinical trial, cohort study, or any other
original research, or a case series or case report:
1) Title Page
2) Abstract
3) Level of Clinical Evidence
4)
Key Words
5) Text, consisting of
- a) Introduction
b) Patients/ Materials and Methods
c) Results and
d) Discussion
6) Acknowledgments
7) References
8) Tables
9) Figures
For a Tips, Quips and Pearls manuscript:
1) Title Page
2) Abstract
3) Key Words
4) Text, consisting of:
- a) Introduction
b) Technique
c) Discussion
5) Acknowledgments
6) References
7) Tables
8) Figures
The main segments are to be identified
by bold, left-margin headings, capitalizing the first letter of each named section.
As a general rule, when describing activities
that were part of the investigation, as well as the observed outcomes, use the past tense. Present tense is reserved for discussions
of states of knowledge, which are considered ongoing (for example, "Open reduction and internal fixation is the treatment of choice for
displaced, unstable fractures...").
Whenever uncertainty arises in regard to format, authors are encouraged to consult the following
text:
AMA Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors, 10th Edition, edited by JAMA & Archives Journals.
Title
Page: The title page, which is to be submitted as a separate electronic file, should include the following items:
• title
of the manuscript,
• authors, and their credits, including academic degrees (Do not use initials to designate diplomate status
in any organization. Fellowship status in an organization can be designated using the appropriate initials.)
• The corresponding
author should be clearly identified and the telephone and telefax numbers, as well as the electronic and standard mailing addresses,
should be provided.
• name of affiliated institutions (hospital/university/organization or private practice), if applicable,
including city, state, and country (if not from the United States).
The title, as provided in the title page, will be used in any
publication related to the article, as will the order of the authors submitted.
Abstract: Submit an abstract summarizing
the contents of the article on a page separate from the title and manuscript (this is done in a text box during the online submission
process). We request that the abstract be no longer than 250 words, since PubMed truncates longer abstracts at 250 words, resulting in
an uncontrolled loss of information information that could adversely influence online searching efforts.
• The Abstract for
a manuscript is to be written as continuous prose, without subheadings for each section of the manuscript.
• The Abstract for
a report of research should reflect the format of the manuscript itself, describing pertinent information for each section of the manuscript
(without subheadings). It should briefly introduce the research problem, explain methods, summarize results, and provide a conclusion.
• The Abstract for a case study should state the condition of interest, and include a brief summary of the specific clinical
situation, the uniqueness or rarity of the diagnosis or the novelty of an intervention, and a statement regarding the clinical significance
of the case.
• Do not use any abbreviations or bibliographic reference citations in the Abstract. If necessary, parts of the
Abstract may be written as phrases, rather than as complete sentences.
Level of Clinical Evidence: Immediately following
the Abstract section, the author is to designate the paper in accordance with the Level of Clinical Evidence as depicted in Table 1.
It is important to understand that all levels of clinical evidence can be meaningful and interesting to readers, and authors are encouraged
to submit all types of investigations.
1. A complete assessment of the quality of individual studies requires critical appraisal
of all aspects of the study
design.
2. A combination of results from two or more prior studies.
3. Studies provided consistent results.
4. Study was
started before the first patient enrolled.
5. Patients treated one way (e.g., with arthrodesis) compared with patients treated another
way (e.g., with arthroplasty) at the same institution.
6. Study was started after the first patient enrolled.
7. Patients identified
for the study on the basis of their outcome (e.g., failed arthrodesis), called "cases," are compared with those who did not have the
outcome (e.g., had a successful arthrodesis), called "controls."
8. Patients treated one way with no comparison group of patients
treated another way.
* Adapted from material published by the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, Oxford, UK. For more information,
please see
www.cebm.net.
Key Words: Provide 3-5 key words or phrases
for indexing purposes. Keep in mind that electronic searches of the biomedical literature depend to a large degree on key words. Refer
to PubMed's Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) webpage (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov ) for help selecting key words. Key words
are to be spelled in lower case letters, unless representative of a proper name, and listed in alphabetical order separated by a comma
between each word/term. Avoid abbreviations in the key words, unless a proprietary name uses an abbreviation. If a proprietary name is
used, be sure to include the appropriate symbol indicating registered trademark. In general, proper names are not used as key words.
Text: The text should be comprised of the following four sections: Introduction, Patients and Methods or Materials and Methods,
Results, and Discussion.
Introduction: This section should provide a concise overview of the state of knowledge regarding
the specific problem being studied. It should begin with a statement of the problem and its clinical/social importance, followed by an
explanation of recent and important research related to the topic, supported by reference citations. The importance of the topic is best
conveyed by means of statistics that indicate the prevalence and/or economic impact of the condition in the population/society. After
an explanation of what is known, and what remains unknown in regard to the focus of the study, the author should concisely state the
specific research question or hypothesis for the current investigation. Generally, the last sentence of the Introduction should include
a statement that describes the specific study design (see Table 2, below) and reiterates the research question.
Patients and Methods (or Materials and Methods): If the study is a clinical investigation involving living,
human participants (patients, subjects), then the heading for this section should be "Patients and Methods." If the investigation involves
animals, cadavers, or in vitro models of any sort, including computer models, then this section should be termed "Materials and Methods."
In general, the methods section should describe the following elements of the investigation:
• aims,
• assessors and
other members of the investigational team, including surgeons of record if they are also authors of the paper or outcomes assessors,
population or sample.
• intervention,
• endpoints (outcomes),
• statistical methods used to determine the
meaning of the results
In essence, this section should describe the building blocks of good clinical evidence that were used in
the investigation (see Table 3, below).
More detailed discussion of these important elements of biomedical investigation can be found at a number of evidence-based medicine
websites, including the Centre for Health Evidence (
http://www.cche.net/ ), the Centre for Evidence-based Medicine (
http://www.cebm.utoronto.ca/
), and the Oxford Centre for Evidence-based Medicine (
http://www.cebm.net/ ).
Ideally, the methods section should provide
enough detail to allow subsequent researchers to replicate the study. When reporting randomized controlled trials, a study flow diagram
in CONSORT format, as well as all of the information required by the CONSORT checklist, should be provided. The CONSORT statement, checklist,
and study flow diagram are available at
http://www.consort-statement.org . Authors submitting reports of clinical trials
are encouraged to register their investigation with a public domain repository, such as ClinicalTrials.gov, available at
http://clinicaltrials.gov/
. Please indicate in the methods section of your submission, the specific registration number and public domain repository where the
study data can be found.
The following elements of the investigation should be concisely described in the methods section:
Aims:
The primary aim of the investigation, as well as any secondary aims, should be clearly stated. A distinction should be made between primary
and secondary aims. As a rule, the sample size should be adequate to identify a statistically significant difference in regard to the
primary aim, if such a difference exists. Power and sample size calculations can be determined using any of a number of software programs,
such as that found at:
http://biostat.mc.vanderbilt.edu/twiki/bin/view/Main/PowerSampleSize . In describing the primary
aim, many authors will restate, in some fashion, their hypothesis and research question, emphasizing that they undertook to answer the
question.
Assessors:
• Members of the investigational team should be described in regard to their participation
in the study; namely:
- * if they served as outcome assessors
* if they performed an intervention
*
if they abstracted data from medical records, in the case of a retrospective study
* If they performed statistical analyses
of the data
• For studies in which subjective measurements are determined, such as measurements of radiographic
angles, a method should be described for breaking ties and determining an outcome when indecision or uncertainty existed.
•
If outcomes assessors were blind to treatment allocation, this must be stated.
• If outcomes assessors were participants in
the intervention, such as members of the surgical team or treating clinicians, this must also be stated.
Study population:
• The methods section should provide readers with an explicit description of the participant/patient population and the time
period from which they were selected. The time period should delineate the day, month and year that the period started; and the day,
month and year that the period ended (MM/DD/YYYY-MM/DD/YYYY). If the day that the time period started is not precisely known, then it
is acceptable to state just the month and year that initiated and ended the period (MM/YYYY-MM/YYYY). This is a very important detail,
since the duration of interest can be very different, and remains unclear, if only the year at the start and end of the time period is
depicted. It is also important for the author to state whether or not treatment allocation was determined in a random fashion, and whether
or not participants in a clinical trial were blind to treatment allocation.
• For case series and cohort studies, the author
should state whether or not the participants were enrolled consecutively. The inclusion and exclusion criteria must be clearly stated,
and it is best to simply list these in a fashion that would allow other interested investigators to repeat your study.
• Authors
should also indicate whether or not the investigation was conducted with Institutional Review Board approval, and whether or not participants/patients
volunteered and consented to be in the investigation.
• Participants in the investigation should be referred to as "participants"
if the diagnostic test or intervention is experimental and not yet approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration, and as patients
for all other tests or interventions that are already known to be therapeutic, safe, and efficacious.
Intervention:
• In any investigation, the intervention needs to be explicitly described.
• If participants were randomized
to an active therapy that was compared to standard therapy, or to placebo, then each treatment arm needs to be described.
•
Authors are encouraged to avoid presenting a detailed narrative report of an operative intervention for a standard procedure that can
be referenced in any of a number of textbooks or published articles in peer-reviewed journals.
• Reference can be made, with
an appropriate citation, to a standard procedure as it is described in a textbook; and variations on the procedure should be described
in detail.
• We do not want to publish an entire operative report.
• Novel interventions, notable variations on standard
procedures, decision points related to an intervention, and adjunct procedures should be thoroughly described.
• Generic drug
names should be used wherever possible. When a brand name is used, the name and address of the manufacturer must be identified in parentheses
immediately following the proprietary name. As a rule, the proprietary name should be used the first time that the medication or device
is mentioned, and thereafter referred to in generic terms. Whenever medication use is described, complete dosing information (dose, method
of administration, frequency and duration of use) should be included.
Endpoints (outcomes):
• Outcome measures
should be explicitly defined in terms of how the variable was measured, who made the measurement, and whether or not the assessor was
blind to the intervention (for an intervention trial).
• Authors should clearly state if outcomes were based on physical examination,
chart review, telephone interview, questionnaire or radiographic films, or some other method.
• As a rule, any variable that
a reasonable clinician would consider important in regard the treatment of a patient, as it pertains to the investigation, should be
considered in the analysis.
• In addition to the intervention/s or outcome/s of interest (dependent variable/s), typical independent
variables include such things as age and age category, gender, activity level, body mass index (BMI) or BMI category, comorbidities,
medications, duration of treatment, surgeon or clinical site, adjunct therapies, frequency and duration of follow-up, and post-intervention
management procedures (immobilization, physical therapy, etc.). Items such as those listed above should be referred to as "variables"
and not as "parameters," since the term "parameter" should be reserved for statistical expressions that describe the data, such as the
mean and standard deviation, or beta coefficients derived from a regression analysis.
• Whenever possible, it is preferable
that "hard" endpoints be used, such as analytical measurements, clinical or microbiology laboratory results, and the like. Whenever "soft"
endpoints, such as quality of life (QOL) or foot-related QOL, are considered, it is preferable to use health measurement instruments
that have previously been shown to be reliable and to provide valid information.
• Keep in mind that a health measurement instrument
in and of itself is not said to be valid, although the information gained from the use of the health measurement instrument may (and
should) be. QOL instruments should be specific to the foot and ankle (ACFAS, AOFAS, Bristol Foot Score, Foot Function Index, etc.), as
well as measures of general health (SF-36, etc). Whenever a health measurement instrument is used, the author should cite the reference
wherein the reader can find the results of the reliability and validation study related to the instrument.
• Investigator derived
questionnaires should be described in terms of reliability and validity, if such testing was undertaken by the investigators, or if it
has been described in a previous publication.
• For scales that rank categories (e.g., mild, moderate, severe) an aggregate
score should be used. For measurements of pain, the 10-cm visual analog scale (VAS) is recommended.
Statistical Methods:
• The statistical plan should be clearly described, and every investigation should include at least descriptive and inferential,
as well as univariate and multiple variable, statistical analyses.
• The descriptive statistical analysis should define parameters
such as the measure of central tendency (mean or median average), and measures of dispersion (standard deviation or range).
•
The parameter, as well as the statistical test, should be selected based on the type and distribution of the data.
• Continuous
numeric data that are normally distributed are suitable for representation using the mean and standard deviation, and may be analyzed
using mean-based statistical tests (such as Student's t-test).
• Categorical data, and data that are non-normally distributed,
are suitable for representation using the median and range, and may be analyzed using median-based (nonparametric) methods such as the
Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-ranks test, sign test, Wilcoxon rank-sum test, and the Kruskal-Wallis equality-of-populations rank test,
and other null hypothesis tests and methods of estimation.
• For categorical data, Fisher's exact method should be used whenever
possible.
• Univariate analyses should describe the association of independent variables with the outcome of interest (dependent
variable), whereas multiple variable analyses should describe the association of all of the clinically important variables with the outcome
of interest.
Results should be presented with only as much precision as is of scientific value. For example, measures of association
(odds ratios, relative risks, risk differences, etc.) should typically be reported to two significant digits. As a rule, the terms "significant"
and "significantly" should be reserved for use when describing statistical differences. The statement "no significant difference was
found" between 2 or more groups should not be made unless a power analysis was done and the value of alpha (level of significance, typically
5%) or beta (the power to detect a statistically significant difference, usually 80% or 90%) is reported.
Use of the word "significant"
requires reporting of a P-value (probability) or, preferably, the 95% confidence interval about a point estimate. Ninety-five percent
confidence intervals are preferred whenever the results of survivor analyses are given in the text, tables or graphs. Except when 1-sided
tests are required by study methodology, such as in noninferiority trials, 2-sided P-values should be reported. By convention, P-values
larger than 0.01 should be reported to 2 decimal places, those between 0.01 and 0.001 to 3 decimal places, and P-values smaller than
0.001 should be reported as P < 0.001. Probabilities should never be reported as P = 0.000. Furthermore, use of the word "correlation"
or the term "correlates with" requires that a correlation coefficient be calculated and reported, otherwise terms such as "association"
or "associated" should be used. Use the uppercase P as the symbol to indicate the probability.
The results of a
sensitivity
analysis, such as that described by Greenland (Maldonado G, Greenland S: Simulation study of confounder-selection strategies. Amer
J Epidemiol. 1993; 138: 923-936.), or that described by Rosenbaum (Rosenbaum PR. Sensitivity analysis for matched case-control studies.
Biometrics. 1991 Mar; 47(1): 87-100; and, Rosenbaum PR. Discussing hidden bias in observational studies. Ann Intern Med. 1991 Dec 1;
115(11): 901-5.), should be presented for retrospective studies where unmeasured independent variables may have potentially influenced
the results.
Additional references that may be useful in regard to the description of the methods and the presentation of a statistical
plan include:
-
Bailar JC III, Mosteller F. Guidelines for statistical reporting in articles for medical journals: amplifications
and explanations. Ann Intern Med 1988; 108: 266-73.
Altman DG, Machin D, Bryant TN, Gardner MJ (eds). Statistics with Confidence.
2nd edition. London: BMJ Books, 2000.
Malay DS. Some thoughts about data type, distribution, and statistical significance. J Foot
Ankle Surg 45: 57-9, 2006.
Malay DS. Levels of clinical evidence. J Foot Ankle Surg 46: 63-4, 2007.
Results:
The results section should provide quantitative information about the data collected, in the form of descriptive and inferential statistics.
• Relevant information on the study population includes demographic information for each subgroup (control group and study groups),
exclusions and attrition. Inferential statistics should be used to compare groups using appropriate statistical tests based on the size
of the study population, type of variables under study (discrete vs. categorical), and the distribution of the data collected.
•
Quantitative information should be summarized in the text, and readers should be referred to relevant tables for more detailed information.
As a rule, a minimum of three results tables should be presented, and designated Tables 1, 2, and 3. Table 1 typically depicts the baseline
demographic characteristics of the sample population, often categorizing the patients/participants by intervention or outcome, and showing
whether or not statistically significant differences existed between the groups. For randomized controlled trials, it is not necessary
to depict statistically significant differences at baseline, since randomization distributes the characteristics by chance. Table 2 generally
depicts the results of the univariate analyses, and Table 3 generally depicts the results of the multiple variable analyses.
•
Additional tables can be helpful when the data warrant such detail. Figures and tables used to report the results need to be complete
with enough detail to stand alone, without the need for the reader to refer to the detailed text in order to fully understand the results.
Therefore, the table title, headings and legends need to be thoughtfully phrased so that there is no ambiguity or lack of information
(sample size, units of measurement, statistical test used to calculate the P-value, etc.).
Discussion: The discussion section
offers the authors' interpretation of the results of their investigation. Authors should consider how their results fit into the general
state of knowledge on the subject, as well as their clinical relevance. In addition, authors should acknowledge the limitations of their
investigation that may have introduced bias, and they should discuss how the results may have been affected by bias.
Finally, suggestions
for clinical applications and/or further research may be appropriate. Do not include a separate "Conclusion" subsection, as the final
paragraph of the discussion should describe the authors' conclusions (and the paragraph can start with a sentence that states: "In conclusion,
we found..." or something to this effect).
Acknowledgement: Acknowledgments should be made to those who have informally contributed
their expertise or assisted in the investigation, rather than to those who have contributed to the manuscript while performing the role
of their regular occupation.
References: References are cited in the body of the text by means of numeric citations listed
parenthetically in the appropriate sentence, prior to the end of the sentence (usually just before the period ending the sentence, or
immediately following mention of a specific author or previous publication). Reference citations are to appear in sequential numeric
order, beginning with the number "1" and continuing in order the first time that a particular reference is cited, until the last citation
is noted. In other words, supply references numbered in the exact order they appear in the text (not alphabetically).
Do not use
superscripts, and do not submit a document with endnotes embedded via software algorithms (macros) that link items on the reference page
to the in-text citation. If you use such macros to write your paper, please disable the macro, or convert the references cited to text
only, prior to submitting your manuscript. This is important because embedded macros impede the editorial process, and greatly slow down
the turnaround time related to reviewing and editing a manuscript.
Begin the list of references on a new page. The references should
be double-spaced. Sources not identified in the text should not be listed. Unpublished sources must be included in parentheses within
the body of the text, not in the Reference Section. Abbreviations for journal titles should conform to those used by Medline (
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=pubmed). If Medline does not index a journal, then spell out the entire journal name
in addition to listing the author name/s, title of the article, volume number, page numbers, and year of publication.
Always list
all authors, and do not use "et al" when listing your references. The term "et al" may be used in the body of the text; however, it is
generally reserved for mentioning papers written by more than three authors. Textbook references must include the specific page or pages
used. Web site references must include the date when the site was last accessed.
Examples of reference citations include:
-
For a journal article:
1. Mendicino RW, Orsini RC, Whitman SE, Cantanzariti AR. Fibular groove deepening for recurrent peroneal
subluxation. J Foot Ankle Surg 40:252-263, 2001.
For a textbook:
2. Trevino SG. Disorders of the hallucal sesamoids.
In Foot and Ankle Disorders, pp 379-398, edited by MS Myerson, WB Saunders, Philadelphia, 2000.
For an electronic version of a
print journal:
3. Gardner MJ, Boraiah S, Hentel KD, Helfet DL, Lorich DG. The hyperplantarflexion ankle fracture variant. J
Foot Ankle Surg [serial on the Internet] 46:256-60, 2007. Available at:
http://www.jfas.org/issues/contents.
For
a Web page:
4. Clinical Practice Guideline Heel Pain Panel. Diagnosis and Treatment of Heel Pain. American College of Foot
and Ankle Surgeons Web site. September/October 2001. Available at:
http://www.acfas.org/pubresearch/cpg/heelpain-cpg.htm
. Accessed July 20, 2007.
For a personal communication:
5. John A. Ruch, DPM; personal communication, dd/mm/yyyy.
For
a thesis or dissertation:
6. Malay DS. "The Incidence and Risks of Failure to Heal After Lower Extremity Amputation for the Treatment
of Neuropathic Foot Ulcer in Diabetic Patients" (MA thesis, The University of Pennsylvania, 2006), 2-4.
Tables:
Tables should be clear and support the specific points mentioned in the text.
• Black and white lines and text are preferred.
The "insert table" function of the toolbar of most word processors works well for this.
• Tables and their accompanying legends
should be able to stand alone, communicating the meaning of the information without reference to the main text.
• In the text,
tables are cited using parentheses about the table-reference being cited. For example: "(Table 1)". You do not need to state: "(see Table
1)."
• Each table should be titled, and accompanied by a table legend.
• The table title should be formatted as in
the following example: "Table 1. The dataset."
• Do not use abbreviations in either the title or the table legend, unless the
abbreviation is defined in the legend.
• Table titles and legends must be submitted for each figure, in consecutive order,
double-spaced, on a separate page from the text, typically following the list of references cited.
• Abbreviations or footnotes
should be explained in lower case alphabetical superscripts in the legend beneath the table.
• Each table may be submitted
as a separate page (file), or included sequentially in the body of the text (preferable).
• All tables must be original, unless
indicated otherwise.
• Tables previously published in other sources should be accompanied by a letter from that publishing
company and author, granting permission for their use.
Figures: Photographs and illustrations should be clear and support
the specific points mentioned in the text.
• Figures and their accompanying legends should be able to stand alone, communicating
the meaning of the information without reference to the main text.
• In the text, figures should be cited using parentheses
about the figure-reference being cited. For example: "(Figure 1)".
• Each figure should be titled, and accompanied by a figure
legend.
• The figure title should be formatted as in the following example: "Figure 1. The gastrocnemius recession."
•
Do not use abbreviations in either the figure title or the figure legend, unless the abbreviation is defined in the legend.
•
Abbreviations or footnotes should be explained in lower case alphabetical superscripts in the legend beneath the figure.
•
Figure titles and legends must be submitted for each figure, in consecutive order, double-spaced, on a separate page from the text.
• Each figure must be submitted as a separate page (file), in other words, do not submit multiple figures embedded in a Word
file.
• Images should be provided in TIF, GIF or EPS format, per the instructions for online submission at
http://ees.elsevier.com/jfas
.
• Manuscripts that describe a pathological entity must be accompanied by a photomicrograph depicting the histopathology,
with magnification power and staining technique indicated.
• Radiographic images should be submitted in grayscale format.
• Black and white line drawings are acceptable only if they are of professional quality.
• All figures must be original,
unless indicated otherwise.
• Figures previously published in other sources should be accompanied by a letter from that publishing
company and author, granting permission for their use.
• Illustrations and figures will not be returned to the authors.
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Updated June 2008