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General Orthopaedics

THE TOP ONE HUNDRED CLASSICAL PAPERS IN ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY – A BIBLIOMETRIC ANALYSIS

Combined Irish Orthopaedic Association, Welsh Orthopaedic Association, Scottish Orthopaedic Association (IOA, WOA, SOA)



Abstract

Background

Author credibility and creativity is often gauged by the number of scientific papers published, with the frequency of citations for particular articles reflecting the impact of published data on the area of practice.

Aims

The objective of this study was to identify and analyse the qualities of the top one hundred cited articles in Orthopaedic surgery.

Methods

We used the database of the Science Citation Index of the Institute for Scientific Information (1945-1995) in addition to Scopus, Medline and Pubmed search engines.

Results

1490 articles were cited in excess of 100 times with the top 100 being subjected for further analysis. The 100 articles discussed were published between 1945 and 2005. The mean number of citations per articles was 446.5 (range 334 - 1786). The majority of published articles originated in the United States (68) with the United Kingdom and Canada closely behind (12 and 5 respectively). The 100 articles were published in 7 Orthopaedic journals led by the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery American edition (JBJS Am) (n=55) followed by Spine (n=16), Clinical Orthopaedic Related Research (n=14), JBJS Britain (n=7), Journal of Orthopaedic Research (n=5), Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavia (n=2) and Foot and Ankle International (n=1). 80 of the most cited articles reported clinical experiences, 7 were clinical review articles and 13 dealt with basic science. 34 persons authored greater than one top citing article.

Conclusion

Analysis of the most cited Orthopaedic papers allows us a unique insight into the qualities, characteristics and clinical innovations, required for a paper to attain the ‘classic’ status. Based on these findings to be well cited such a contribution should be published in the English Language in a high impact journal and originate in North America or the United Kingdom.