Pharmacological Reviews

Journal Title

  • Pharmacological Reviews

ISSN

  • E 1521-0081 | P 0031-6997

Publisher

  • American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics

Listed on(Coverage)

JCR 1997-2023
SJR 1999-2020;2022-2023
CiteScore 2011-2023
SCI 2010-2019
SCIE 2010-2024
CC 2016-2024
SCOPUS 2017-2024
MEDLINE 2016-2024
EMBASE 2016-2024

Active

  • Active

    based on the information

    • SCOPUS:2024-10

Country

  • USA

Aime & Scopes

  • Pharmacological Reviews publishes papers that provide a comprehensive perspective of innovations in pharmacology and experimental therapeutics. High priority will be given to papers that critically examine potential novel therapeutic targets or approaches. Manuscripts should integrate work on basic and cellular pharmacology as well as physiologic aspects germane to the topic. Authors are encouraged to discuss data relevant to the clinical application of the field reviewed. Papers published in Pharmacological Reviews are generally invited by the Editor after consideration of recommendations from the Associate Editors. Others who have an interest in writing for Pharmacological Reviews are encouraged to send proposals to the Editor. The proposal should include a detailed outline of the proposed article and a brief curriculum vitae. Articles in Pharmacological Reviews deal mainly with the current status of the subject under review. They are to be written clearly and concisely and should be intelligible to nonspecialists, with definitions of unfamiliar technical terms and explanations of difficult or controversial points included. At the same time, the review is to be sufficiently precise and detailed to command the attention and respect of experts in the field. Selective rather than exhaustive coverage of the literature is requested. Previous reviews of the subject and of related fields should be cited. Authors are asked to be critical of methods, results, and conclusions and to challenge accepted concepts where warranted. Conflicting points of view are to be presented objectively in good perspective. Deficiencies in the field may be pointed out and avenues for further work may be indicated. The usual length ranges between 10 and 30 printed pages, corresponding to about 30 to 90 manuscript pages. Diagrams, tables, and illustrations should be included to bring out new concepts and important relationships.

Article List

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