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Circulation Research. 2003;92:1
doi: 10.1161/01.RES.0000052925.89426.09
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(Circulation Research. 2003;92:1.)
© 2003 American Heart Association, Inc.


Editorials

Fifty Years of Circulation Research

An Anniversary Editorial

The Editors

From the Editor in Chief and Associate Editors, Circulation Research.

Correspondence to Circulation Research Editorial Office, 2700 Lighthouse Point East, Suite 230, Baltimore, MD 21224. E-mail circulation.research@circresearch.com


An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract.
 

It is our distinct pleasure to announce that Circulation Research celebrates her 50th anniversary this year, 2003, as the leading publication dedicated to basic cardiovascular research. The history of the journal has been summarized recently.1 Since its inception, Circulation Research has sought to publish the highest-quality research, containing innovative experimental advances and yielding mechanistic insights. The past 50 years can be classified by one, all-encompassing word—change. One need read no further than the Table of Contents in this issue, the first of 2003, to marvel at the breadth and depth of changes in concepts and technology. Authors and reviewers have seen manuscripts advance from handwritten pages sent by post to digital files transmitted via the internet. The changes could not be more vast, and still this journal remains the tried-and-true mode of disseminating vital information to colleagues and contributors.

The Editors have considered how best to celebrate this important anniversary. One possibility would have entailed resurrecting landmark studies and discoveries reported in Circulation Research that have left an indelible mark on science, driving the field into new avenues of exploration. However, we believe that, while recapitulation of previously published work can be useful, it often falls short of linking the past with the future of cardiovascular science. We thus initiate this anniversary celebration with a look at the charter editorial published in the first issue of Circulation Research by her inaugural Editor, Carl J. Wiggers, which follows in its original appearance.2 Wiggers’ message is clear. Science should neither . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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