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| Title
page |
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The title
page should contain a clear, concise and
informative title of the article followed
by the names and affiliations of the authors.
The affiliation should comprise the department,
institution (usually university or company),
city, and state (or nation) and should be
typed as a footnote to the author’s
name. The Corresponding Author must indicate
his or her complete mailing address, office/cellular
phone number, fax number, and email address
at the lower left of the Title Page. |
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| Abstract |
| The
abstract should not more than 200 words
and structured under the following headings:
Objectives, material and methods, Results
and Conclusions. Reviews and mini reviews
also require an abstract, but it need not
be structured. Abstract must be followed
by four-six keywords. |
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| Introduction |
| This should be brief and
indicates aim of the study and the essential
back ground information. Introduction should
clearly state the hypothesis or purpose statement,
how and why the purpose or hypothesis was
developed and why the author deems it important. |
|
| Material
and methods |
| Please provide concise but
complete information about the material and
the analytical, statistical and experimental
procedures used. This part should be as clear
as possible to enable other scientists to
repeat the research presented. The use of
subheadings to divide the text is encouraged.
Primary headings should be in BOLD CAPITAL
LETTERS. Secondary or subheadings should be
in Bold sentence case. Third level subheadings
should be in Italicized sentence Case. In
case of animal experiments authors must give
the details of ethical approval. |
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| Result
and Discussion |
| Data
acquired from the research with appropriate
statistical analysis described in the methods
section should be included in this section.
In this part, the same data/ information
given in a table must not be repeated in
a figure, or vice versa. Tables and Figures
should be self explanatory and it is not
acceptable to repeat extensively the numerals
from tables into text and give lengthy and
unnecessary explanations of the Tables and
Figures. Discussion should relate the results
to current understanding of the scientific
problems being investigated in the field. |
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| Conclusion |
| This should clearly explain
the main conclusions of the work highlighting
its importance and relevance. |
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| References |
| Cite in the text by author
and year (Martin et al., 1993) and should
be arranged in alphabetical order. |
| Journal
|
Takka S., Acarturk
F. Calcium alginate microparticles
for oral administration: I: Effect
of sodium alginate type on drug release
and drug entrapment efficiency. J
Microencapsul. 1999; 16: 275-290. |
| Book
|
Ringsven MK and
Bond D. Targeted and controlled drug
delivery. 2nd ed. Delmar Publishers,
New York (1996) 123-125 |
| Chapter
in a Book |
Chandrasekaran,
S. K., Benson, H., & Urquhart,
J. (1978). Methods to achieve controlled
drug delivery: The biomedical engineering
approach. In J. R. Robinson (Ed.)
Sustained and Controlled Release Drug
Delivery Systems (pp. 557-593). New
York: Marcel Dekker, Inc. |
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| Acknowledgement |
| All acknowledgments (if any)
should be included at the very end of the
paper before the references and may include
supporting grants, presentations, and so forth. |
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| Tables
& Figures |
| Tables and figures should
not be embedded in the text, but should be
included at the end of the manuscript on separate
pages. Tables should be created with a word
processor and cited consecutively in the text.
To ensure the highest print quality, your
figures must be submitted in TIF format with
minimum 300 dpi or higher resolutions. Captions/legends
will be placed below figures and adjusted
to 10 font size. |
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| Abbreviations |
| Standard abbreviations should
be used throughout the manuscript. All nonstandard
abbreviations should be kept to a minimum
and must be defined in the text following
their first use. |
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