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Start submissionAuthor Guidelines
Instructions for authors are based on the “Council of Scientific Editors’ White Paper on Promoting Integrity in Scientific Journal Publications, 2012 Update” and “CMJE Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing, Editing, and Publicationsof Scholarly Work in Medical Work Journals”, December 2019).
The purpose of the “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” is to publish the latest developments in radiation diagnosis and therapy.
The main task of the journal is to search for articles containing relevant and reliable information about the results of research and original observations on clinical issues and new technologies, reviews of articles and meta-analyses on topics of current medical importance.
The journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” accepts original research articles, meta-analyses and reviews, clinical case reports, and expert articles for publication.
It welcomes to publication the entire international community of roentgenologists and radiologists, including basic and clinical academic researchers, medical specialists, as well as residents, postgraduates, and practitioners of related specialists, who write articles in Russian and English.
The journal publishes the results of investigations conducted in leading specialized research institutes and centers of Russia and the CIS countries.
The Editorial Board of the journal hopes that your published materials will be useful for the development of world science in radiation diagnosis and therapy.
The Editorial Board corresponds with authors by e-mail: edition@russianradiology.ru
I. Recommendations to the author before submitting an article
Publication ethics
Before submitting an article to the Editorial Office of the journal, please, carefully read the following materials available on its website www.russianradiology.ru:
- thematic rubrics and orientation of the journal;
- the principles of the editorial ethics of the journal.
Submission of an article to the journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” implies that:
- the article has not been previously published elsewhere;
- the article is not under consideration elsewhere;
- all co-authors agree with the publication of the current version of the article.
Criteria for authorship
Authors are people who have been identified by a scientific group as main participants in the work set forth and who have agreed to take responsibility for their work. In addition to being responsible for his own part of the work, the author should be able to indicate who of his/her co-authors is responsible for other parts of the work.
The journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” shall accept the following authorship criteria:
1) development of the concept and design or analysis and interpretation of data AND
2) justification of the manuscript or its critical verification for important intellectual content AND
3) final approval of the manuscript for publication AND
4) consent to be responsible for all aspects of the work, and assumes that issues, such as the thoroughness and conscientious performance of any part of the study submitted are properly investigated and resolved.
The authors are collectively responsible for ensuring that all persons named as authors meet all the four criteria.
The list of authors does not include people who are not the authors of the article. The names of people who are not the authors, but have provided another support, are indicated in the “Acknowledgement” section.
Medical Research Reporting Guidelines
The Editorial Board of the journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” recommends that the authors should use the following checklists and schemes designed by the international health organizations (EQUATOR, Enhancing the Quality and Transparency of Health Research), when preparing original articles and other materials:
CONSORT 2010 checklist of information to include when reporting a randomizes trial;
PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses;
The CARE Guidelines: Consensus-based Clinical Case Reporting Guideline Development;
SRQR (Standards for reporting qualitative research);
STARD 2015: An Updated List of Essential Items for Reporting Diagnostic Accuracy Studies.
The Editorial Board of the journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” welcomes the registration of clinical trials in the open registry ClinicalTrials.gov no later than the moment of including the first participant.
Obtaining a patient’s informed consent to participate in the study and subsequent publication should be noted in the manuscript.
If there are grounds to believe that the study could violate the Declaration of Helsinki, the authors should provide an appropriate explanation and evidence that the controversial aspects of the work have been unequivocally approved by the local ethics committee. The approval of the responsible committee does not eliminate the possibility that the editors can express their opinion on the feasibility of the study.
A cover letter
The journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” welcomes the submission of a cover letter along with the manuscript.
The cover letter will help the editor reduce the time spent on a preliminary review of the manuscript, avoid the appointment of a peer reviewer with whom there is a potential conflict of interest, and make sure that the author complies with the principles of publication ethics.
The author’s task is to provide basic information about the manuscript in the short and correct form.
Advice for the authors:
- The manuscript title and authors’ names shall be indicated in the first paragraph. The type of your manuscript (original article, review, etc.) may be described. The main results of your investigation may be described in the first and subsequent paragraphs. Your previous work or works can be referred to, if necessary.
- Explain why the manuscript is well suited to its publication in the journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine”.
- The last paragraph should state the following:
- the manuscript is original;
- no part of the manuscript has been previously published and or under consideration elsewhere. If the manuscript has not been previously published as a preprint, please indicate this.
- the publication of a scientific article in the journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” does not violate anyone’s copyright and it complies with the international ethical guidelines for research.
- the author(s) is (are) responsible for unlawful use of the objects of intellectual property and copyright in the scientific article in full measure in accordance with the current legislation of the Russian Federation.
- a conflict of interest is absent or disclosed.
- a list of experts to whom the manuscript should not be sent for peer review (there is a potential conflict of interest).
- the full names and contact details of all co-authors, the name of the corresponding author.
- the authors’ signatures.
The cover letter should not:
- repeat the abstract of the manuscript (the editor will get acquainted with it independently);
- use highly specialized abbreviations, terms or mention a lot of details (these data and the validity of their use will be checked by a peer reviewer).
Accompanying documents
- A cover letter
- Conflict of interest disclosure form.
Before submitting your article for review, make sure that the file (files) contains (contain) all necessary information in Russian and English, indicate the sources of information given in figures and tables and that all citations are correctly formatte
II. Guidelines for formatting articles
Format
An article must be typed, 1.5-spaced, using Times New Roman 12 font, with 2-cm margins on both sides of the text, except the left one being 3 cm wide. All pages must be numbered. Automatic word hyphenation cannot be used.
Accompanying documents and the authors’ signatures on the last page should be scanned as PDF or JPEC.
The full text of the article must be in a single file (title page, abstract, keywords, and the text of the article, tables, references, and information about the authors); the file with the text of the article should be named for the first author of the article (Ivanov. Text). Figures and scans of the documents are recorded in separate files that also contain the name of the first author (Ivanov. Figure).
Article language
The journal accepts manuscripts written in Russian and/or English for publication. If the article is written in Russian, there is a need for English translation for the title of the article, authors’ full names, the official names of affiliations with their postal address (given in transliteration), abstract, keywords, financing, conflict of interest, acknowledgements, author contributions to the writing of the article, information for citation, information about the authors, the titles of figures, tables, with a full description, references (see below). As they wish, the authors can provide the full text of the article in both Russian and English. If there are full texts of articles in the two languages, the journal publishes the Russian text in printed version, whereas it provides both variants in electronic one.
Foreign authors’ articles may be published in English by the decision of the Editor-in-Chief without translation into Russian (with the exception of the title, abstract, and keywords) or with full or partial translation (titles and captions to figures and tables).
Title page
The title page should contain the following information:
- The type of the article (original article, review, clinical case);
- the title of the article;
- the full name of author(s);
- the full name of the affiliation where the author (co-authors) work, as well as postal address and code of each affiliation;
- information about the authors (their full name, academic degree, title, position, place of employment, ORCID);
- abstract;
- keywords;
- conflict of interest (required);
- financing (required);
- acknowledgements (if any);
- information for citation;
- correspondence information (E-mail of the corresponding author).
The title of a scientific article should briefly and accurately summarize the investigation. Abbreviations, formulas, and geographical references should be avoided.
If there are several authors, each name and the corresponding affiliation must have a numeric index. If all the authors of the article share the same affiliation, the place of employment of each author should not be identified separately, it is enough to write the affiliation once. If the author has several places of employment, each is indicated by a separate numeric index.
The title page is duplicated in English. The authors’ surnames are best transliterated in the same way as in previous publications (and in the ORCID ID), or using the Board of Geographic Names (BGN) system (see the website www/transliteration.com). For the affiliation(s), it is essential for the officially accepted English version of the name to be indicated.
Sample article (template) - download
Abstract
The abstract of an article is the main source of information in Russian and foreign information systems and databases that index the journal. The abstract is available on the journal website, on that of the Scientific Electronic Library and is indexed by network search engines. The reader should understand the essence of the investigation from the article abstract; according to the latter, he should determine whether to refer to the full text of the article in order to obtain more detailed information.
The abstract should only state the essential facts of the work.
Original articles must have the following abstract structure: Objective; Material ((Subjects) and methods; Results; Conclusion.
A structured summary is not required for clinical cases and reviews.
The author’s abstract must contain 200-250 words.
The abstract should be accompanied by several keywords or phrases that reflect the main theme of the article and facilitate the classification of the work by the computer search engines.
When preparing a summary for a report on randomized clinical trials, the Editorial Board of the journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” recommends using the CONSORT checklist: http://www.consort-statement.org/extensions?ContentWidgetId=562
Keywords
The abstract is immediately followed by keywords (at least three ones). Keywords in English are recommended to be taken from the organized Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) thesaurus..
Design for original articles
In preparing the recommendations, this section uses the “Guidelines for the preparation and formatting of scientific articles in the journals indexed in international scientometric databases” prepared by the Association of Science Editors and Publishers (ed. O.V. Kirillova. Moscow, 2017. 144 p.).
The structure of original articles should correspond to the IMRAD format (Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion): the introduction reflecting the state-of-the-art at the time of writing the article; material (subjects) and methods; results; discussion; concluding points or conclusion (upon request from the authors).
“Introduction” in this section is an important part of the article, and the content of the introduction determines the reader’s further interest in the text. The introduction should capture the reader’s interest. This section describes the general research topic, the goals and objectives of scheduled work, theoretical and practical significance, provides the most well-known and authoritative publications on the topic under study, and identifies unresolved problems. This section should contain a rationale for the necessity and relevance of the study. The information in the Introduction should be made according to the from-general-to-particular principle. The introduction generally includes four subsections: 1. Description of the problem related to the study; 2. Review of the literature related to the study; 3. Description of gaps in the problem or what has not yet been done; 4. Formulation of the purpose and objectives of the study.
“Material (subjects) and methods” in this section detail the methods used to obtain results. A general scheme of experiments/investigations is usually given first, and then they are presented in as much detail as possible in so many details that any competent specialist can reproduce them, by using only the text of the article. This section should contain information on where and when the study has been conducted; criteria for inclusion and exclusion of patients or experimental animals [1]; a description of the study method (cohort, prospective, randomized drug trial, retrospective study, a series of observations); a detailed description of a novel drug, a method, modification, an experiment, surgical intervention in a certain sequence; a brief description of the protocol (A Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) [2].
The methods published earlier should be accompanied by links: the author describes only the changes related to the topic.
Contemporary statistical data processing methods should be used in the works presenting the results of researches. The obligatory components in the statistical analysis are calculation of a sample size based on statistical power, determination of the normalcy of distribution according to the Kolmogorov–Smirnov or Shapiro–Wilk tests, and detailed representation of logistic or linear regression analysis models (determinants and co-variants), statistical package and version.
“Results” in this section present the experimental or theoretical data obtained during a study. The results are given in processed version: as tables, graphs, organizational or structural diagrams, equations, photos, and figures. This section provides only facts. Their interpretation and comparison with the data by other researchers must be left for the Discussion section. If there have been many similar relationships represented as graphs, provide only a single typical graph, and give data on the existing quantitative differences between them in the table.
Results and discussion cannot be given in the same section.
“Discussion” in this section contains the interpretation of the study findings, an assumption about the facts obtained, and the comparison of the authors’ own findings with the results by other authors. In the Discussion section, the author should move from specific information in the sections Methods and Results to the more general interpretation of the results.
“Conclusions/Conclusion” in this section contains the main ideas of the main text of the article. This part of the section should be carefully edited to ensure that the wordings given in the previous sections should not be repeated. It is advisable to compare the obtained results with those scheduled to be obtained, as well as to show their novelty and practical importance and to prescribe the limitations that have been encountered in the course of the work. At the end, conclusions and recommendations are presented and main directions for further research in this area are determined.
Formatting reviews
It is desirable that compilation of reviews should comply with international guidelines for systematic literature search methods and standards. The abstracts of review articles should contain information about literature search methods in the Scopus, Web of Science, MedLine, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, Global Health, CyberLeninka, RSCI, and others databases. The keywords of the review articles should include the word “review”. In addition to basic works, the bibliography should contain publications over the past 5 years, primarily articles from journals, links to highly cited papers, including those from Scopus and Web of Science. The references must be verifiable.
The title of a systematic review should include the words “systematic review”. For more information on the compilation of reviews, see the PRISMA Manual (Recommended Reporting Elements for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis), available at http://prisma-statement.org.
Formatting clinical cases
Clinical observations (clinical cases) are formatted according to the CARE guidelines The latter can be found on http://care-statement.org.
Standards
All terms and definitions must be scientifically reliable; their spelling (both Russian and Latin) must correspond to the "Encyclopedic Dictionary of Medical Terms" (1984, ed. Acad. B.V. Petrovsky, http://www.twirpx.com/file/123175). Medicines should be given only in international nonproprietary names that are used first, then, if necessary, several trade names of drugs registered in Russia (in accordance with the information search system "Klifar-Gosreestr" [State Register of Medicines]).
It is desirable that the names of inherited or familial diseases correspond to the international classification of inherited conditions in man (Mendelian Inheritance in Man – https://omim.org).
The names of microorganisms should be checked in accordance with “Medical Microbiology” (ed. V.I. Pokrovsky, http://www.webmedinfo.ru/medicinskaya-mikrobiologiya-pozdeev-o-k-рokrovskij-v-i.html).
The manuscript may be accompanied by a glossary of terms (that are not clear or that can cause reading difficulties). In addition to generally accepted abbreviations for units of measurement, physical, chemical, and mathematical quantities and terms (for example, DNA), there may be abbreviated phrases that are frequently repeated in the text. All letter designations and abbreviations introduced by the author must be deciphered in the text at their first mention. Simple words may not be abbreviated, even if they are often repeated. Drug doses, units of measurement, and other numerical values should be specified in the International System of Units.
Requirements for figures
Each image is served as a separate file. Files with graphical displays must have logical names (Ivanov. Figure 1).
In the text, all illustrations (photos, schemes, diagrams, graphs, etc.) are referred to as figures. All figures in the text need to be referenced. The figures should be placed just after the text where they are first mentioned.
Arial fonts should be used for presentations.
All figure legends should be translated into Russian as a text footnote.
Black-and-white and color tone figures should be expanded to .tiff and 300 dpi resolution. Vector graphics have extensions .ai, .eps (in the version no higher than Adobe Illustrator CS6).
If an electronic graphical display is created in a Microsoft Office application (Word, PowerPoint, Excel), then it should be presented on the "as is" principle in the same format to allow changes to be made to it.
You should not send:
- very low resolution files (for example, formatted for display on the screen);
- the figures published earlier in other works by the authors (the editors reserve the right to verify the figures for plagiarism through Google Images).
Your attention is drawn to the fact! Since 2018, the journal has published figures in black and white (color images are formatted in black and white).
Legends to figures and photos
The figure legends must contain an exhaustive commentary on the display, including an indication for the used imaging technique and for the projection presented when demonstrating the results of instrumental diagnostic procedures, all conventional symbols and abbreviations must be disclosed. Hence, when describing medical images, you should specify an area of examination, method (procedure), contrast phase, projection, direction of the plane of the tomographic section, etc. (for example, contrast-enhanced MSCT of the brain, arterial phase, axial section, three-dimensional reconstruction); thereafter, give a comment describing the pathological changes.
A staining method and the magnification of an eyepiece and lens must be specified in the microphotograph legends. The graph legends indicate designations for the abscissa and the ordinate and the units of measurement, as well as provide footnotes for each curve.
If the figure consists of several parts (for example, a, b, c), they should have a common title and separate legends for each part.
Formatting tables
Tables (if they are more than one) must be numbered on the top right; their title should be given below. The words given in the tables may not be abbreviated. All numbers in the tables must match those used in the text. All stub columns and rows should be titled.
Tables may be given in the text, without placing them on separate pages. References to the tables are given in the text of the article.
When a table or figure is taken from any source, the latter should be cited – the corresponding number is given from a list of references.
Mathematical formulas
Mathematical equations should be presented as editable text, rather than images, and be numbered in order. Variables should be italicized.
Lists of references
The correct description of the sources used in the reference lists is a guarantee that the cited publication will be taken into account when evaluating the scientific activities of its authors and the affiliation that they represent.
The journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” uses the Vancouver referencing style in the list of references; the latter must be numbered not alphabetically, but in the order in which they are cited in the text, regardless of the language in which the work is given.
Reference citation numbers in the text of the article should be placed in square brackets.
It is necessary to make sure that all the sources given in the reference list are referenced in the text (and vice versa).
In addition to the fundamental works, the reference list should contain publications in the last 5 years, primarily articles from journals, links to highly cited sources, including Scopus and Web of Science (approximately 50% of all sources). The links must be verifiable.
Each scientific fact should be accompanied by a separate reference to the source. If several scientific facts are mentioned in the same sentence, each of them is followed by a link (not at the end of the sentence). For multiple references, they are arranged in chronological order, for example [5-9].
The abbreviated journal names should be given in accordance with the List of Title Word Abbreviations: http://www.issn.org/services/online-services/access-to-the-ltwa.
References to Internet sources must be reliable and long-lasting. As a minimum, you should give the full URL and the date when the reference was made available. You should also indicate any other additional information, if known: DOI, authors’ names, dates, references to publication sources, etc.
You should not refer to unpublished, retracted (withdrawn) articles. Self-citation is not allowed unless absolutely necessary (in these cases, no more than 3-5 references).
When referring to the articles that have a Digital Object Identifier (DOI), you must specify it. To check the availability of a DOI of the article, follow the link: http://search.crossref.org.
You should not refer to textbooks, dissertations, and abstracts of theses, it is more correct to refer to the articles published on the materials of thesis research. You may make a link to this source as a footnote.
If the cited source is documents (orders, State Standards, patents, medical and sanitary rules, guidelines, regulations, resolutions, sanitary and epidemiological rules, standards, and federal laws), they should be indicated not in the reference lists, but be given as footnotes in the text.
In the bibliographic description of the book (see the sample), it is important to specify the city and year of publication. If the link is given to a chapter from book, you should indicate first the author(s) and the title of the chapter, then the author(s) or editor(s) and the title of the entire book, and then output data.
If the bibliography of an article from the journal contains an authoring team of up to 6 people inclusive, all should be mentioned, if there is a larger authoring team, you should give 6 first authors and others, “et al.” in foreign ones; if editors are mentioned, “ed.” ("Ed." or "Eds." in foreign ones) is placed in parentheses after the last name.
For the bibliographic description of an article from the journal with an authoring team of up to 6 people inclusive, you should mention all; with larger authoring teams, you should cite the names of the first 6 authors and add ‘et al.’; if editors are mentioned, "Ed." or "Eds." should be placed before their surnames.
The reference list should be given in two versions: one in the original language (Russian language sources in Cyrillic, English language ones in Latin), and the other - References in Latin for international databases.
The References block for Russian language sources requires the following reference structure: author(s) (transliteration), translation of the title of the book or article into English, the title of the journal (transliteration and translation), output data (see examples below), indication of the language of the article in brackets (in Russ.) (see sample).
Transliteration for the list of references in Latin is convenient to prepare using the site www.translitteration.com. It is important! The titles of journals/articles should not be translated independently, it is necessary to copy the officially documented translation posted on the journal's website/in the archive or in the e-library database, otherwise the link will be invalid.
The author is responsible for the accuracy of bibliographic data.
If the above rules are violated, the articles shall be returned to the authors for revision.
III. Journal-author interaction
The Editorial Board of the journal carries on a correspondence with the author responsible for the latter, but, if the authoring team wishes, letters may be sent to all authors for whom an email address is specified.
Manuscripts and accompanying documents shall be submitted to the Editorial Office via the website http://www.russianradiology.ru: on the main page on the right, there is a button with the inscription “Send the manuscript”. To send your manuscript via the site, you must register yourself on the site. Then, after registration, you must go to your personal account and send the manuscript. The Editorial Board does a correspondence with the authors by the e-mail: edition@russianradiology.ru
You can get acquainted with the review procedure by clicking on the link (the link to the review section).
Before publishing the article, the corresponding author is sent the final version of the article layout which he is obliged to check. The response is expected from the authors within 2 days. In the absence of a response letter from the author, the article layout is considered approved for publication.
IV. Procedure for reviewing the decisions of the editor/peer reviewer
If the author does not agree with the conclusion of a peer reviewer and/or the editor or with individual comments, he/she can challenge the decision. To do this, it is necessary for the author:
- to correct the manuscript according to the reasoned comments of peer reviewers and editors;
- to state clearly his/her position on the issue under consideration.
The editors facilitate the re-submission of manuscripts that could potentially be accepted, but have been rejected due to the need to make considerable changes or to collect additional data, and are ready to explain in detail what needs to be corrected in the manuscript in order for the latter to be accepted for publication.
V. Editorial Board actions in case of plagiarism, fabrication, or falsification of data
When detecting the author’s inequitable conduct and when identifying plagiarism, fabrication, or falsification of data, the Editorial Board is guided by the COPE guidelines.
Inequitable behavior is considered by the Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine to mean a scientist’s any actions that include the improper handling of study objects or the intentional manipulation of scientific information, in which the latter ceases to reflect the studies observed, as well as the scientist’s conduct that does not meet the accepted ethical and scientific standards.
The journal's policy in relation to citation and self-citation - download
Unexecuted borrowing, as well as executed borrowing, but that completely duplicates other documents in sections, such as results, discussion, and conclusion (including self-citation) are impermissible. There may be executed borrowing in the Introduction that is a review of previous studies by the author and/or other specialists, in the description of methods and methodologies, and in the lists of the sources used.
To get acquainted with the concepts of citation, self-citation, etc., follow the link https://www.scieditor.ru/jour/article/view/96, such as the article: Kuleshova A.V., Chekhovich Yu.V., Belenkaya O.S. On the Razor Edge: How not to turn self-citation into self-plagiarism. Nauchnyi redactor i izdatel (Science Editor and Publisher). 2019;4(1-2):45-51. DOI: 10.24069/25420267-2019-1-2-45-51.
Inequitable conduct is not assigned by the journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” to honest errors or honest discrepancies in the design, performance, interpretation or evaluation of research methods or results, or misconduct that is unrelated to the scientific process.
VI. Error correction and peer review
If the text of the article is found to have errors that affect its perception, but do not distort study results, they can be corrected by amending the text of the article; this change is published in the “Amendments” section in the current issue of the journal.
If the text of the article is found to have errors that distort study results, or in the case of plagiarism, detection of the author’ (authors’) inequitable conduct associated with data falsification and/or fabrication, the article may be retracted. Article retraction may be initiated by the Editorial Board, an author, an affiliation, or an individual.
The article to be retracted is marked with the “Article retracted”, and the page of the article shall place information about the reason for its retraction. Information about article retraction is sent to the databases where the journal is indexed.
Copyright Notice
By submitting the article and accompanying files (hereinafter referred to as the "Work") for publication in the journal, the author (as well as all authors of this work, if the latter was created in co-authorship) agrees that he/she grants the publisher the exclusive and perpetual right to use the work on a non-repayable basis (exclusive, perpetual, and gratuitous license) in Russia and foreign countries within the following limits and scope:
- to publish the work in a paper and/or electronic format, to produce reprints of the work, to place the latter in both open and paid Internet accesses, and to send the metadata of the work or full texts to various indexing databases and depositories;
- to reproduce the work, that is, to make one or more copies of the work or its part in any material form, including as sound or video recording. In this case, recording the work on an electronic medium is also considered to be reproduction;
- to distribute the work by sale or other alienation of its original or copies;
- to translate or provide another rework the work;
- to bring the work available to the public so that anyone can access the work from anywhere and at any time of their own choice (publication in the public domain);
- to place the work or its parts in various collections of similar works;
- to grant the rights provided for in this article, in full or in part, to third (individuals and legal entities) persons on both a paid basis and a gratuitous one.
A license agreement is concluded with each author before publishing his/her article in the journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine”.
All articles published in the journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” are distributed under the free Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported (CC BY-NC 3.0) license. According to the terms of the license, the journal materials may be copied, distributed on any medium and in any format, adapted, modified, and become the basis for new materials, when meeting the following conditions: reference to the original source, use of derivative materials for non-commercial purposes.
If you plan to use the materials of the journal “Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine” for commercial purposes, please contact the Editorial Office at: edition@russianradiology.ru
Privacy Statement
Specified when registering the names and addresses will be used solely for technical purposes of a contact with the Author or reviewers (editors) when preparing the article for publication. Private data will not be shared with other individuals and organizations.
ISSN 2619-0478 (Online)