ClinMed International Library

For the past decade, ClinMed International Library has been at the forefront of publishing cutting-edge research in clinical medicine. Over the last 10 years, we have consistently provided a platform for publishing innovative findings and advancements in medical science.

The ClinMed International Library is a repository and an open access publisher for medical research that covers a wide range of areas in Clinical Medicine. ClinMed serves as a global platform for medical practitioners and research scholars to foster their learning and professional acumen through an extensive portfolio of research articles and publications that can be accessed without any restrictions.

Dedicated to clinical medical research, we now publish over 70 quality peer-reviewed journals making all the articles freely accessible. The manuscripts submitted to ClinMed will be processed through standard parameters and international peer review systems. This has enabled us to establish new milestones in the global research arena in terms of cogency and integrity, and to disseminate highly credible and accredited research content for researchers, scholars, and practitioners across the globe.

We ensure that all researchers and authors publishing their papers with us retain copyrights, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution License that permits the unrestricted use and re-use of the content with proper citation.



  Last Updated: October 09, 2024

Articles Search by   Keyword   |   Journal title   |   Author name   |   DOI

 Open Access DOI:10.23937/2378-3397/1410032

Ranking and Rating Analyses of Barriers to Surgical Care for Children in Guatemala

Brian C Gulack, Shirin Heydari, Ligia Figueroa, Shannon Tew, Brad M Taicher, Sherry S Ross, David Boyd and Henry E Rice

Article Type: Original Article | First Published: November 20, 2015

Barriers to surgical care in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) remain poorly understood. This is particularly true of surgical care for children, where families are required to make complex decisions amidst multiple obstacles. Unmet surgical care contributes to at least 11% of the global burden of disease. For many disease processes in children, surgery is a cost-effective health intervention, as it results in a high degree of averted disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) with costs compa...

 Open Access DOI:10.23937/2378-3397/1410031

Vancomycin and Imipenem Release from Nails Covered with Antibiotic-Loaded Acrylic Cement

Jorge D Barla, Sancineto F Carlos, Luciano A Rossi, Gimenez I Maria, Visus M and Elizondo Cristina

Article Type: Research Article | First Published: November 17, 2015

There is a lack of information in the literature regarding pharmacokinetic properties of nails covered with antibiotic-loaded acrylic cement. The aim of this research work was to describe the release of vancomycin and imipenem from nails covered with ALAC over a period of 6 weeks. Furthermore, we analyzed if an increased nail diameter associated to a thicker ALAC coat could result in an increased antibiotic elution from the cement and if the combination of the two antibiotics in the same cement ...

 Open Access DOI:10.23937/2469-5807/1510017

Radiological Pathology

Shoichi D. Takekawa

Article Type: Short Commentary | First Published: December 31, 2015

Pathology and radiology have become pivotal in the clinical practice of daily medicine. Diagnostic radiology and pathology are indeed indispensable wheels of medical practice. Clinicians achieve tentative diagnoses based on laboratory data and medical images in addition to their physical findings and patient medical history. Based on all available findings and on patient characteristics, clinicians finally decide on further therapeutic management strategies, including medical and surgical therap...

 Open Access DOI:10.23937/2469-5807/1510016

Orbital Necrobiotic Xanthogranuloma: A Case Report

Hind M. Alkatan and Abdul Elah A. Al-Abdullah

Article Type: Case Report | First Published: December 24, 2015

Xanthogranulomatous ocular and periocular lesions in adults have been reported in 3 main forms: adult-onset xanthogranuloma (AXG), necrobiotic xanthogranuloma (NXG), and Erdheim-Chester disease. The three forms differ in regards to laterality, systemic associations, and prognosis. NXG is a rare chronic progressive disease considered to be systemic with mostly asymptomatic internal organ involvement. Ophthalmic manifestations include conjunctival, corneal and scleral involvement. We are presentin...

 Open Access DOI:10.23937/2469-5807/1510015

Squamous Morules (Microcarcinoids) in Gastroesophageal Polyps; a Mimicker of Invasive Carcinoma

Safia N Salaria and Elizabeth Montgomery

Article Type: Review Article | First Published: November 30, 2015

Colorectal lesions termed squamous morules or microcarcinoids display predominantly squamous and variable endocrine differentiation and are often found in colorectal adenomas with high grade dysplasia thus mimicking invasion. Herein, we describe histopathologic, immunohistochemical classification and clinical correlation of analogous lesions in the esophagus and stomach. We identified five cases (3 men, 2 women) from November 2004-March 2013 of gastric and gastroesophageal polyps with squamous m...

 Open Access DOI:10.23937/2474-3631/1510013

Maladaptive Perfectionism: A Potential Risk Factor for Smartphone Addiction?

Jiang Long and Tieqiao Liu

Article Type: Letter to the Editor | First Published: December 14, 2015

A Smartphone is a portable device that could be capable of various tasks on different occasions. With many powerful functions, smartphones permeate into our everyday lives at an astonishing pace. Surely, the smartphone could make our lives much more convenient, but it could also bring quite a few issues, especially when it is used improperly. Nowadays, smartphone addiction is not a novel construct any more. It could be defined as an inability to regulate one's use of the smartphone, which eventu...

 Open Access DOI:10.23937/2377-4630/3/1/1040

The Evaluation of 1-Physician Versus 2-Physician Deep Sedation with Propofol

Lindsay M Harmon, Anthony J Perkins, Beth Sandford and Christopher S Weaver

Article Type: Original Article | First Published: January 25, 2016

Emergency physicians routinely perform emergency department procedural sedation (EDPS) with propofol and its safety is well established. However, in 2009 the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) enacted guidelines defining propofol as deep sedation and requiring administration by a physician. Common EDPS practice had been one-physician performing both the sedation and procedure. EDPS has proven safe under this 1-physician practice. However, the 2009 guidelines mandated separate physi...

 Open Access DOI:10.23937/2377-4630/3/1/1039

Difficult Airway Management in Patients Submitted to General Anesthesia. Is it a Matter of Devices or Predictive Scores?

Lavinia Bergesio, Nadia Ruggieri, Orazio Difrancesco, Enrico Giustiniano and Franco Cancellieri

Article Type: Research Article | First Published: January 13, 2016

Airway management is mostly performed in the operating room, and unexpected difficult tracheal intubation may be a life-threatening event which incidence varies in a wide range with estimated pooled frequency of 6.8%. Difficulty at laryngoscopy or intubation, if inability to maintain a patient airway occurs, exposes the patient to the risk of complications basically related to hypoxia. Its incidence has been reported around 1-4% of patients with normal airway and, more recently, in a range of 1....

 Open Access DOI:10.23937/2377-4630/2/4/1038

The Effect of Perioperative Restrictive Fluid Therapy on Postoperative Edema and Ecchymosis in Rhinoplasty

Erden V, Sever E, Dagdelen S, Guler C, Kirgezen T, Toprak N and Yigit O

Article Type: Original Research Article | First Published: December 22, 2015

Postoperative edema and ecchymosis can usually occur after rhinoplasty and can cause disgruntled results which influence the satisfaction of patient and surgeon. Prolonged periorbital ecchymosis and severe edema may cause a delay in healing and affect the result of surgery. Many of agents have been used to reduce the influence of edema and ecchymosis developing around the eyes after rhinoplasty, such as corticosteroids, lidocaine and adrenaline combination, melilotus extract....

 Open Access DOI:10.23937/2377-4630/2/4/1037

Use of Human Fibrinogen Concentrate in Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Patients

Christopher F. Tirotta, Richard G. Lagueruela, Danielle Madril, Jorge Ojito, Chelsea Balli, Evelio Velis, Marilyn Torres, Francisco Alonso, Robert Hannan and Redmond P. Burke

Article Type: Original Research Article | First Published: December 21, 2015

Bleeding after cardiac surgery can cause increased morbidity and mortality. This is a particularly serious problem in pediatric patients, especially neonates and infants, who may receive multiple units of blood products intra- and postoperatively. The aim of this study is to demonstrate that the use of human fibrinogen concentrate (HFC) during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) decreased operative blood loss and the need for perioperative blood component therapy in neonatal, infant and other high-risk...

ClinMed Archive

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Articles Published

All articles are fully peer reviewed, free to access and can be downloaded from our ClinMed archive.

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All Indexed Journals

Partnered with ICI World of Journals. Check the Index Copernicus Values of ClinMed Journals

ClinMed Journals Index Copernicus Values

Clinical Medical Reviews and Case Reports: 91.40

International Archives of Nursing and Health Care: 90.87

International Journal of Sports and Exercise Medicine: 91.84

Obstetrics and Gynaecology Cases - Reviews: 88.42

International Journal of Womens Health and Wellness: 91.79

Journal of Musculoskeletal Disorders and Treatment: 91.73

Journal of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology: 91.55

Journal of Infectious Diseases and Epidemiology: 91.55

International Journal of Clinical Cardiology: 89.24

Journal of Dermatology Research and Therapy: 89.34



Digital Object Identifier System

Content Registration at Crossref and DOI assignment for all published articles

Why ClinMed?

Highly Indexed Journals
Preservation of author rights
Global followership
Non-commercial objectives
Neutral and unbiased publishing process
Reprints issued accross the world
Timely submission for indexing
Published with CrossMark® policy

New Issues

VOLUME 10

International Journal of Clinical Cardiology

ISSN: 2378-2951 | ICV: 89.24

VOLUME 10

VOLUME 10

Obstetrics and Gynaecology Cases - Reviews

ISSN: 2377-9004 | ICV: 88.42

VOLUME 10

VOLUME 9

Journal of Hypertension and Management

ISSN: 2474-3690 | ICV: 87.69

VOLUME 9

VOLUME 10

International Journal of Diabetes and Clinical Research

ISSN: 2377-3634 | ICV: 87.97

VOLUME 10

VOLUME 9

Journal of Infectious Diseases and Epidemiology

ISSN: 2474-3658 | ICV: 91.55

VOLUME 9

Featured Articles

Treatment of a Lacerated Aneurysmal Neck during Surgical Clipping of Usual Saccular Cerebral Aneurysms: Two Illustrative Cases

Hideki Nakajima, MD*, Morio Takasaki, MD, Taku Hongo, MD, Katsuma Iwaki, MD, PhD, Ryota Miyake, MD and Yasuhiro Fujimoto, MD

DOI: 10.23937/2643-4474/1710160



Pathophysiology of the Skin in Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes and Emerging Therapeutic Opportunities

Priyanka Prabhakar Poonja, MBBS,* and Flora Kiss, MD, PhD

DOI: 10.23937/2377-3634/1410182



Colovesical Fistula Secondary to Colorectal Adenocarcinoma: A Diagnostic and Therapeutic Challenge

Abdulrahman Alquliti, Abdullah Salah Alharbi*, Muhammad Ahmad Alghamdi, Abdulaziz Albalawi, Hamad Alakrash and Abdullah Alghamdi

DOI: 10.23937/2469-5742/1510094



High Grade Glioma Surgery, Using 5-Aminolevulinic Acid and Its Effect on Extent of Resection: Early Data from a Single Canadian Center Experience

Felix LeBlanc#, Lyndon Boone#, Timothy Noble, Jane Burns, Dhany Charest, Maxime Richer and Antonios El Helou*

DOI: 10.23937/2643-4474/1710159


Featured Journals

Clinical Medical Reviews and Case Reports Editor-in-chief: Prof. Wei Wang

International Journal of Surgery Research and Practice Editor-in-chief: Prof. Brian Richard Davis

International Journal of Stem Cell Research & Therapy Editor-in-chief: Prof. Faris Farassati

International Journal of Clinical Cardiology Editor-in-chief: Prof. Breijo-Marquez

Journal of Genetics and Genome Research Editor-in-chief: Prof. Ming Zhan

Obstetrics and Gynaecology Cases - Reviews Editor-in-chief: Prof. Leslie Iffy

International Journal of Cancer and Clinical Research Editor-in-chief: Prof. Sulma I Mohammed

International Journal of Diabetes and Clinical Research Editor-in-chief: Prof. Masayoshi Yamaguchi

International Journal of Anesthetics and Anesthesiology Editor-in-chief: Prof. Ike Eriator

International Journal of Sports and Exercise Medicine Editor-in-chief: Prof. J David Prologo

Journal of Rheumatic Diseases and Treatment Editor-in-chief: Prof. Bruce M Rothschild

International Archives of Urology and Complications Editor-in-chief: Prof. Ajay Singla

International Journal of Psychology and Psychoanalysis Editor-in-chief: Prof. Joaquim JF Soares

Journal of Obesity and Weight-loss Medication Editor-in-chief: Prof. Timothy Koch

Trauma Cases and Reviews Editor-in-chief: Prof. William Min

Clinical Medical Image Library Editor-in-chief: Prof.

International Journal of Transplantation Research and Medicine Editor-in-chief: Prof. Lydia M Petrovic

Journal of Otolaryngology and Rhinology Editor-in-chief: Prof. John E. Nathan

Journal of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology Editor-in-chief: Prof. Ryuichi Morishita

International Journal of Critical Care and Emergency Medicine Editor-in-chief: Prof. Yasushi Shibata

International Journal of Womens Health and Wellness Editor-in-chief: Prof. Erich Cosmi

International Journal of Brain Disorders and Treatment Editor-in-chief: Prof. Terry Lichtor

International Journal of Clinical Biostatistics and Biometrics Editor-in-chief: Prof. James Michael Hardin