Startseite The journal Case Reports in Perinatal Medicine starts with open access
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The journal Case Reports in Perinatal Medicine starts with open access

Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 1. Dezember 2021

Ten years ago the Editors and Publisher of the Journal of Perinatal Medicine, De Gruyter, were inspired to start a new journal entitled Case Reports in Perinatal Medicine (CRPM) with the aim to collect cases with uncommon diagnosis, and to describe new diseases, innovative therapeutic methods and unusual side effects in therapy. The Journal publishes case reports and results of small group studies. These reports generate research questions and induce prospective studies. For this reason, these case reports and CRPM have a high educational value in the world of evidence-based medicine.

After several years of online only publication, the publisher De Gruyter and the Journal’s management have decided to switch from subscription to open access publication starting in 2022. This is a significant change in the Journal’s profile and an important milestone in the development of CRPM.

The Journal’s scientific aims will not change as a result of the decision to change to open access. CRPM will continue to publish competent and timely case reports covering clinical, methodological and scientific aspects of perinatology. All manuscripts will continue to be critically reviewed by at least two experts in the field.

In contrast to many newly founded open access journals, CRPM looks back on 10 years of sound and evidence-based publication results, and has been accepted as a serious journal published by an internationally well accepted publishing house.

Until now, the costs of publishing CRPM have been covered by subscription fees. With the change to open access in 2022, CRPM will introduce article processing charges (APCs) to cover processing and publication costs. Authors will be charged a reduced fee of 350 €, which is only due after the article has been accepted.

The decision to continue CRPM as an open access journal was made in light of the changing publication landscape, which poses new challenges and necessitates a shift to new publication models.

Professor Joachim W. Dudenhausen, MD, FRCOG(ae) FIAPM

Editor-in-Chief

Journal of Perinatal Medicine

Berlin, Germany

E-mail:

Heike Jahnke

De Gruyter Publisher

Berlin, Germany

Published Online: 2021-12-01

© 2021 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Artikel in diesem Heft

  1. Editorial
  2. The journal Case Reports in Perinatal Medicine starts with open access
  3. Case Reports – Obstetrics
  4. Myomectomy scar pregnancy ‒ a serious, but scarcely reported entity: literature review and an instructive case
  5. Postpartum ovarian vein thrombosis
  6. Management of a patient in the state of total occlusion of aorta due to Takayasu arteritis in preconceptional and pregnancy period
  7. Stress degree demonstrated in mothers with phenylketonuria or hyperphenylalaninemia infant when requested for total or partial breastfeeding replacement
  8. Successful pregnancy outcome in patient with cardiac transplantation
  9. Further insights into unusual acrania-exencephaly-anencephaly sequence caused by amniotic band – first trimester fetoscopic correlation with two- and three-dimensional ultrasound
  10. Elevated fetal middle cerebral artery peak systolic velocity in diabetes type 1 patient: a case report
  11. Postpartum fibroid degeneration associated with elevated procalcitonin levels
  12. Case report: The first COVID-19 case among pregnant women at 21-week in Vietnam
  13. Posterior urethral valves (PUVs): prenatal ultrasound diagnosis and management difficulties: a review of three cases
  14. Premature fetal closure of the ductus arteriosus of unknown cause – could it be influenced by maternal consumption of large quantities of herbal chamomile tea – a case report?
  15. Spontaneous resolution of fetal ascites secondary to gastrointestinal abnormality
  16. A case of severe SARS-CoV-2 infection with negative nasopharyngeal PCR in pregnancy
  17. Respiratory decompensation due to COVID-19 requiring postpartum extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
  18. Obstetrical history of a family with combined oxidative phosphorylation deficiency 3 and methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase polymorphisms
  19. A case of newly diagnosed autoimmune diabetes in pregnancy presenting after acute onset of diabetic ketoacidosis
  20. Mother and child with osteogenesis imperfecta type III. Pregnancy management, delivery, and outcome
  21. Early detection of Emanuel syndrome: a case report
  22. Case Reports – Newborn
  23. Neonatal cervical lymphatic malformation involving the fetal airway the setting of emergency caesarean section
  24. Rothia dentocariosa bacteremia in the newborn: causative pathogen or contaminant?
  25. Severe hypocalcemia and seizures after normalization of pCO2 in a patient with severe bronchopulmonary dysplasia and permissive hypercapnia
  26. Infrequent association of two rare diseases: amniotic band syndrome and osteogenesis imperfecta
  27. Transient congenital Horner syndrome and multiple peripheral nerve injury: a scarcely reported combination in birth trauma
  28. No footprint too small: case of intrauterine herpes simplex virus infection
  29. Liver laceration presented as intraabdominal bleeding in a newborn with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy
  30. Extremely preterm infant with persistent peeling skin: X-linked ichthyosis imitates prematurity
  31. Thrombospondin domain1-related congenital chylothorax in an infant with maple syrup urine disease: a challenging case
  32. Parenteral nutrition extravasation into the abdominal wall mimicking an abscess
  33. Subcutaneous fat necrosis of the newborn and nephrolithiasis
  34. Fetal MRI assessment of head & neck vascular malformation in predicting outcome of EXIT-to-airway procedure
  35. Scimitar syndrome – a case report
  36. Asymptomatic severe laryngotracheoesophageal cleft (LTEC) in a preterm newborn
  37. Transient generalized proximal tubular dysfunction in an infant with a urinary tract infection: the effect of maternal infliximab therapy?
  38. Congenital Lobular Capillary Hemangioma in a 48 hours old neonate: a case report and a literature review
  39. Neonate born with ischemic limb to a COVID-19 positive mother: management and review of literature
Heruntergeladen am 26.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/crpm-2021-0084/html
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