Abstract Submission Style Guidelines
In order to expedite the publication process of your abstract submission, if it is accepted, we ask that
submitter use a consistent style when imputing the text portion of the submission. Please follow these style
PLEASE NOTE: The maximum character count is 2,500 total. Do not re-enter the abstract title or the authors’
names/institutions in the text submission fields. And do not enter images or tables in the text portion of the
submission. Include Supporting Tables/Documents under the upload task only - each graph or table counts as 150
characters. The total abstract length cannot exceed 2,500 characters. Therefore, if your total character count after completing the abstract portion is 2,000 characters, y
ou would be limited to 3 graphs or tables as your new total
• Numbers – it is not required that numbers are spelled out except at the beginning of a title or sentence. When
numbers are combined with letters please be consistent i
n the style used throughout the abstract. Example: for
carbon dioxide do not use CO2 and CO2 within the same submission
• Letter Number Combinations - Use a hyphen unless the combination designates a chemical formula, such as
• Upper vs Lower Case - In some abbreviations lowercase letters are combined with upper case letters, as in
tissue plasminogen activator (tPA). Please be consistent in the use of abbreviations do not use both tPA and
• Spacing - Please be consistent in the spacing used for abbreviations. Example: do not use both mm Hg and
• Isotopes - Please be consistent in the use of isotopes Example: do not use both Yttrium-90, and Y90
• Greek Letters – maybe abbreviated or spel ed out but do not use both within the same submission Example:
alpha-fetoprotein or α- fetoprotein, but not both
• Unites of Time - Preferably spelled out in titles and running text. Same for al the other time units Thus, "'years"
and "y," "months" and "mo," "days" and "d," "minutes" and "min," "seconds" and "s" (not both "s" and "sec")
• Percent - Use the symbol (%), not the word “percent” after a number and repeat symbol in ranges (eg, 10%-
• Drug Names - Generic name first and in lowercase (unless at the beginning of a sentence), with the brand name
following in parentheses, in initial cap. Example: duloxetine (Cymbalta)
• Corporate Mentions - The first mention of a device or piece of equipment should be fol owed by the
manufacturer’s name, city, and state in parentheses at first mention. Example: LightSpeed VC Unit (GE Healthcare, Milwaukee, Wisconsin).
• Eponyms - Per in-house style, the possessive is not used. Examples: Alzheimer, not Alzheimer’s disease, Edinger-Westphal nucleus, not Edinger-Westphal’s nucleus, etc.
• Designators - Per AMA, capitalize “Table” and “Figure,” but use lower-case all other designators unless they
appear in a title, head, or at the beginning of a sentence, (eg, case, chapter, group, level, page, part, phase,
Valódi és látszatmegoldások Az a mód, ahogyan néhányan a gyógyszereket, azaz drogokat használják, egy kicsivel sem értelmesebb, mint pörölyt alkalmazni ahhoz, hogy agyoncsapjunk egy legyet. A legtöbben nem törődnek azzal, hogy a közönséges, bárhol kapható gyógyszereknek kellemetlen, sőt veszélyes mellékhatásaik is lehetnek. Ez bizonyára túlzás! Bárcsak t
Detection of Chronic Kidney Disease* using eGFR (estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate) Why are we changing from Cockcroft-Gault eGFR to MDRD eGFR? The Cockcroft-Gault formula and Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) formula are both equations to derive an estimated creatinine clearance based on clinical and laboratory parameters. The Cockcroft-Gault formula require