2023年6期
刊物介绍
Hepatobiliary&Pancreatic Diseases International a journal published by First Affiliated Hospital,Zhejiang University School of Medicine,China. It p...Hepatobiliary&Pancreatic Diseases International a journal published by First Affiliated Hospital,Zhejiang University School of Medicine,China. It publishes peer-reviewed original papers,reviews and editorials econcerned with clinical practice and research in the fields of hepatobiliary and pancreatic cover the medical,surgical,radiological,pathological,biochemical,physiological and historical aspects of the subject areas under the headings Liver,Biliary,Pancreas,Transplantation,Research,Special Reports,Editorials,Review Articles,Brief Communications,Clinical Summary,Clinical Images and Case Reports. It also deals with the basic sciences and experimental work. The journal is abstracted adn indexed in SCI-E,IM/MEDLINE,EMBASE/EM,CA,Scopus,Science Direct,etc.更多简介
Hepatobiliary & Pancreatic Diseases International
EDITORIAL
REVIEW ARTICLES
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
- Older liver grafts from donation after circulatory death are associated with impaired survival and higher incidence of biliarynon-anastomotic structure
- Development and validation of a novel model to predict liver-related mortality in patients with idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury
- Clinical-radiomics predictors to identify the suitability of transarterial chemoembolization treatment in intermediate-stage hepatocellular carcinoma: A multicenter study
- Radiofrequency ablation is an inferior option to liver resection for solitary hepatocellular carcinoma ≤5 cm without cirrhosis: A population-based study with stratification by tumor size
- Development and validation of machine learning models for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
- Polyethylene glycol crosslinked decellularized single liver lobe scaffolds with vascular endothelial growth factor promotes angiogenesis in vivo
- The efficacy and safety of endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle biopsy in gallbladder masses
- “Parenchyma transection-first” strategy is superior to “tunnel-first”strategy in robotic spleen-preserving distal pancreatectomy with conservation of splenic vessels