• J Bone Joint Surg Am · Nov 2014

    The hundred most-cited publications in orthopaedic knee research.

    • Sufian S Ahmad, Dimitrios S Evangelopoulos, M Abbasian, Christoph Röder, and Sandro Kohl.
    • Department of Orthopedic Surgery and Traumatology, Inselspital, University of Bern, Freiburgstrasse, 3010 Bern, Switzerland. E-mail address for S.S. Ahmad: sufian.ahmad@insel.ch.
    • J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2014 Nov 19;96(22):e190.

    BackgroundDespite its limitations, citation analysis remains one of the best currently available tools for quantifying the impact of articles. Bibliometric studies list the "best-sellers" in a single location, and they have been published frequently in many fields during recent years. The purpose of the present study was to report the qualities and characteristics of citation classics in orthopaedic knee research.MethodsThe database of the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) was utilized for identification of articles published from 1945 to March 2014. All knee articles that had been published in sixty-five orthopaedic and twenty-nine rheumatology journals and that had been cited at least 200 times were identified. The top 100 were selected for further analysis of authorship, source journal, number of citations, citation rate (both since publication and in 2013), geographic origin, article type, and level of evidence.ResultsThe publication dates of the 100 most-cited articles ranged from 1948 to 2007, with the greatest number of articles published in the 1980s. Citations per article ranged from 2640 to 287. All articles were published in eleven of the ninety-four journals. The leading countries of origin were the U.S. followed by the U.K. and Sweden. The two main focus areas were sports traumatology and degenerative disease. The number of citations per article was also greatest for articles published in the 1980s. Basic research articles were cited more quickly, but not more often, than clinical articles. Most articles represented Level-IV evidence, followed by Levels II, III, and I.ConclusionsThis bibliometric study is likely to include a list of intellectual milestones in orthopaedic knee research. It is apparent that a high level of evidence is not mandatory for an article to gain a large number of citations. Bibliometric reports provide a reflection of the quality of cited research published in a specific field and should therefore provoke thinking within the scientific community.Copyright © 2014 by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated.

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