Instructions to Authors |
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Hypertension publishes scientific investigation of the highest quality in the broad field of blood pressure regulation and pathophysiology, clinical treatment, and prevention of hypertension. The editors encourage submission of original articles that deal with basic, clinical, and population studies of hypertension and related fields such as nephrology, endocrinology, neuroscience, vascular biology, physiology, pharmacology, cellular and molecular biology, and genetics.
Submitted manuscripts must not contain material previously published, except as an abstract, and must not be under consideration for publication elsewhere, in whole or in part. Manuscripts should conform to "Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals" (N Engl J Med. 1991; 324:424-428). Manuscripts are examined by the editors and are usually sent to expert reviewers. Decisions will generally be communicated within 3 weeks after receipt of the manuscript. Acceptance is based on originality, scientific excellence, and topical balance of the journal.
Address new and revised manuscripts and correspondence to the editorial office:
John E. Hall, PhD
Hypertension Editor-in-Chief
University of Mississippi Medical Center
2500 N. State St.
Jackson, MS 39216-4505
Phone: 601-815-1667
Fax: 601-815-1675
Email: hypertension{at}physiology.umsmed.edu
Online Submission: http://submit-hyper.ahajournals.org
Editorial Conflict-of-Interest Policy. Original manuscripts authored or coauthored by the Editor in Chief and/or any of the Associate Editors are handled by either a Consulting Editor or an Associate Editor at a different institution, who makes all decisions about the manuscript, (including choice of referees and ultimate acceptance or rejection). The entire process is handled confidentially. All manuscripts submitted from the Editor's home institutions are also handled entirely by either a Consulting Editor or an Associate Editor at a different institution. The Editor in Chief and/or Associate Editors may additionally, from time to time, refer a manuscript to a Consulting Editor to avoid a perceived or real conflict of interest.
AHA Scientific Publishing Ethical Conduct Policy
Brief Reviews. Brief Reviews are generally invited by the Editors and are definitive summaries of areas that are important to research in hypertension and related areas. Reviews should briefly, but comprehensively, review the literature on a specified topic. The topic should be timely and sufficiently focused to allow a comprehensive review without exceeding 6000 words, including title page, abstract, references, legends, and tables, and figures. (Please note that a single bar graph is approximately 150 words, and table with 3 columns and 10 rows is approximately 100 words.) In special circumstances, reviews may exceed these page limits and specific guidelines will be provided at the time that the review is invited. The author should discuss controversies that have been resolved or that remain, the future of the field both technically and conceptually, and define major unresolved questions. All Brief Reviews, whether invited or not, will undergo peer review.
Hypertension Grand Rounds. These articles are invited reviews that take a case-based approach, including topics related to diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of hypertension. The case presentation will be followed by a discussion of scientific and practical clinical issues related to the case. Where applicable, a discussion of future research necessary for resolving unanswered questions will be included. The topic should be timely and sufficiently focused to allow a comprehensive review without exceeding 6000 words, including title page, case presentation, references, legends, tables, and figures . (Please note that a single bar graph is approximately 150 words, and table with 3 columns and 10 rows is approximately 100 words.) In special circumstances, reviews may exceed these page limits and specific guidelines will be provided at the time that the review is invited. Hypertension Grand Rounds, whether invited or not, will undergo peer review.
Hypertension Highlights. These articles are intended to highlight, provide further perspective, and enhance the overall significance of recent studies published in Hypertension that contribute to our understanding of hypertension and related areas. Hypertension Highlights should be approximately 3000 words and review progress that has occurred during the past 2-3 years in a focused area of hypertension research. Figures that effectively illustrate and summarize key points are encouraged. References should generally be restricted to those published in Hypertension during the last 2-3 years.
Editorial Commentaries. These articles are invited brief commentaries on articles that appear in Hypertension or on topics of particular importance to the readers of the journal. They should be approximately 1500 words, describe controversial issues, and review questions that remain to be addressed. Use of a figure to illustrate key points is encouraged. References are limited to 10 and generally should be restricted to recent years. Editorial Commentaries are generally invited by the editors, but whether invited or not, they will undergo peer review.
Tutorials. These are similar to Brief Reviews but are presented at a level commensurate with their use as a teaching tool. Schematic diagrams and figures are encouraged wherever possible to illustrate important scientific or technical points. Elements of Editorial Commentaries can also be integrated into the tutorial at the author's discretion. The topic should be timely and sufficiently focused to allow a comprehensive review without exceeding 6000 words, including title page, abstract, references, legends, and tables, and figures. (Please note that a single bar graph is approximately 150 words, and table with 3 columns and 10 rows is approximately 100 words.) In special circumstances, Tutorials may exceed these page limits and specific guidelines will be provided at the time that the review is invited. The author should discuss controversies that have been resolved or that remain, the future of the field both technically and conceptually, and define major unresolved questions. Tutorials, whether invited or not, will undergo peer review.
Letters to the Editor. Letters to the Editor express views about articles published in Hypertension. Letters should be no longer than 500 words and should relate to an article published in Hypertension, within the preceding three months. References are limited to 5. Authors of the article cited in the letter will be invited to reply, as appropriate, and the reply must be signed by all authors of the original publication.
Preliminary or circumscribed novel findings of unusual interest may also be submitted as a Letter to the Editor and should be no longer than 1000 words. Authors must double-space text and references, provide a brief title, and obtain signatures from all authors on a copyright transfer agreement for all Letters to the Editor. Letters and replies are reviewed by the Editors and may be edited, and they will appear online only.
If you are unable to upload the items above, please fax them to the Hypertension Editorial Office within 48 hours after completion of online manuscript submission.
Clinical trials maybe listed with Other registries, but these registries must meet the above-mentioned requirements.
General Instructions for Preparing a Manuscript
Methods section. The methods section should provide sufficient detail for the experiments to be reproduced.
Authors should make Unique Materials (e.g., cloned DNAs; antibodies; bacterial or animal cells; viruses; and computer programs) promptly available on request by qualified researchers for their own use. It is reasonable for authors to charge a modest amount to cover the cost of preparing and shipping the requested material and some materials may require a Materials Transfer Agreement between institutions.
GenBank Submissions, National Center for Biotechnology Information, 8600 Rockville Pike, Building 38A, Room 8N-805, Bethesda, MD 20894, Tel: (301) 496-2475
European Bioinformatics Institute, Hinxton Hall, Hinxton, Cambridge CB10 1SD, UK, Tel.: 44-1223-494401; Fax: 44-1223-494472; e-mail: support@ebi.ac.uk
Center for Information Biology, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Shizuoka, 411, Japan, Tel.: 81-559-81-6853; Fax: 81-559-81-6849
Submission to any data bank is sufficient to ensure entry in all.
The following information should be included as an Online Data Supplement:
Discussion. This section should not be used to restate the results but rather to illuminate and place into perspective the results. Excessive discussion and reiteration of points that are obvious from the results are discouraged.
"Perspectives". Authors should include a brief (<250) "Perspectives" section at the end of the Discussion Section. The "Perspectives" section should be clearly labeled with a separate heading. The purpose of "Perspectives" is to indicate the broad implications of the study, and to permit reasonable speculation on the overall importance and future directions of the work. Such perspectives should not replace the conclusions drawn from the study and should be limited to one paragraph. This section should, however, replace the "In summary..." paragraph that is often placed at the end of the discussion.
Authors must list all sources of support for research in this section.
Authors must disclose any and all relationships that could be perceived as real or apparent conflict(s) of interest as a FOOTNOTE after the Sources of Funding section. Conflict-of-interest/disclosure will be published as a footnote to the accepted article. This pertains to relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or other corporations whose products or services are related to the subject matter of the article. Such relationships include, but are not limited to, employment by an industrial concern, ownership of stock, membership on a standing advisory council or committee, being on the board of directors, or being publicly associated with the company or its products. Other areas of real or perceived conflict of interest related to the subject of the article could include receiving honoraria or consulting fees or receiving grants or funds from such corporations or individuals representing such corporations.
If no author has anything to disclose, please list "None".
Online Supplements may consist of any of the following, in any combination: the expanded materials and methods; additional figures and supporting information; additional tables and supporting information; and, video files.
Material to be published as an online only supplement must be uploaded online or supplied on a separate diskette in an IBM PC-compatible format, preferably with either .jpg or .pdf file extensions. The Editorial Office is not responsible for converting files to a suitable format or for extracting data supplement material from the print manuscript disk. Please number items to be published in print using the Arabic system (1 to 5) and items to be published online only using the Roman system (I to V). When referring to online-only material in the print version of the manuscript, use the phrase "please see http://hyper.ahajournals.org." Data Supplements appear only online and will not appear in reprints of the article.
If citations are made in the Online Supplement, the Online Supplement must contain its own independent Reference Section with references numbered sequentially, beginning with reference 1, even if some of these references duplicate those in the print version.
The Table of Contents of Hypertension highlights articles that contain Online Supplements by a paperclip icon and/or video camera icon, and lists the URL where supplements can be accessed.
Include two copies of the request and a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Phone: 410-528-4050; fax: 410-528-8550; E-mail: journalpermissions@lww.com.
Authors of papers that are accepted for publication and that exceed the 6,000 word limit will be charged for the overage. Authors will be charged an additional $425 for each additional 1,000 words over 6,000. The usual $70 page charge will also apply. Word count will be calculated by the editorial office and will include references, figures, and tables.
Policies
AHA Scientific Publishing Conflict of Interest Policy
AHA Scientific Publishing Ethical Conduct Policy
Forms
Authorship Responsibility and Copyright Transfer Agreement
Conflict(s) of Interest/Disclosure(s) Questionnaire
Acknowledgment Permission Form
Journal Subject Heads for Article Collections Feature on Journals Web Site
Artwork Guidelines (PDF)
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