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Original Research

Open Access

World Orofacial Pain Research Production: A Bibliometric Study (2004–2005)

  • Claude Robert1,*,
  • Nicolas Caillieux1
  • Concepción S. Wilson2
  • Jean-François Gaudy1
  • Charles-Daniel Arreto1

1Université Paris Descartes, Faculté de Chirurgie Dentaire, Laboratoire d’Anatomie Fonctionnelle, Montrouge, France

2School of Information Systems, Technology and Management, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

DOI: 10.11607/jofph.22.3.02 Vol.22,Issue 3,September 2008 pp.181-189

Published: 30 September 2008

*Corresponding Author(s): Claude Robert E-mail: claude.robert@univ-paris5.fr

Abstract

Aims: To provide a snapshot of the scientific literature on orofacial pain. Methods: The authors identified 975 papers related to orofacial pain in the Current Contents Life Sciences and Clinical Medicine collections of the Thomson Scientific database that were published during 2004 and 2005 and analyzed them using bibliometric indicators. Results: Among the 54 countries involved, the United States ranks first by number of papers (293), followed by Japan (107), and the United Kingdom (90). The high volume of research activity in some Northern European countries is highlighted, along with that of the European Union (384 papers). The scientific literature on orofacial pain was published in 247 journals; 13 of the top 15 most prolific journals for articles on orofacial pain were found in the Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine subdiscipline of Current Contents/Clinical Medicine, and the Journal of Orofacial Pain was the highest ranked for such articles. Conclusion: This study complements subject reviews of orofacial pain research and provides a more complete picture of the research activity in this field.


Keywords

bibliometrics; journals; orofacial pain; scientific literature

Cite and Share

Claude Robert,Nicolas Caillieux,Concepción S. Wilson,Jean-François Gaudy,Charles-Daniel Arreto. World Orofacial Pain Research Production: A Bibliometric Study (2004–2005). Journal of Oral & Facial Pain and Headache. 2008. 22(3);181-189.

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