Welcome to Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism
JCBFM focuses on brain metabolism and lactate! FREE
Recent research suggests that lactate, not glucose, may be the main source of fuel for the brain. Further exploration into this topic field will provide valuable information on cerebral activity and brain imaging methods. In this web focus, the Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, Nature Clinical Practice Endocrinology & Metabolism, Nature Clinical Practice Neurology, Nature Medicine, and Nature Neuroscience bring you many of the most important articles in this exciting field.
About the cover
Free online issue
Volume 28, No 5
May 2008
ISSN: 0271-678X
EISSN: 1559-7016
ISI 2006 Impact Factor: 4.843*
33/199 Neuroscience
16/93 Endocrinology & Metabolism
11/61 Hematology
Editor-in-Chief:
Richard J Traystman, PhD
*Journal Citation Reports, Thomson 2007
FEATURED ARTICLES
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Autophagy after ICH FREEORIGINAL ARTICLE
GABA Modulates Local cbf and cmro2 FREEORIGINAL ARTICLE
CBF Autoregulation in Liver Failure FREEORIGINAL ARTICLE
Neuroprotective Effects of TempolORIGINAL ARTICLE
ROS-independent PreconditioningORIGINAL ARTICLE
Proliferating Progenitor Cells and Ischemic ToleranceCurrent Issue
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Autophagy after ICH FREE
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
GABA Modulates Local cbf and cmro2 FREE
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
CBF Autoregulation in Liver Failure FREE
News
Read about a case of DEND syndrome, treated with sulfonylurea therapy to restore glucose homeostatsis and ameliorate some of the neurological symptoms in this article from Nature Clinical Practice Neurology.
Surgery Insight: the role of surgery in the management of low-grade gliomas. Read more in this article from Nature Clinical Practice Neurology.
Read the most highly cited JCBFM 2005 articles for FREE!
Click here to read about sex differences in NO and PARP ischemic cell death pathways.
Click here to read about JNK's role as a cell death mediator in ischemic brain injury.
Due to the limited printing space in JCBFM and our current back log of papers waiting to go to print, new word limits and figure/table limits have been instituted for our journal. You will find these in the Guide to Authors, which can be located on the submission website and on the www.nature.com/jcbfm website. Although these new limits were instituted in August, we will not be returning any manuscripts that do not meet the new limits until October 1, 2007. Please review the new limits before submitting a new manuscript to JCBFM.
-
Research and Reviews
Latest research highlights and reviews from the NPG family of journals

