Multiple Myeloma Impact Factor

 If cancer includes plasma cells, the body begins to generate plasma cells in growing amounts. Both rare and exactly similar, the misplaced plasma cells are called myeloma cells. Myeloma cells tend to grow in the bone marrow and the hard, outer bones. The myeloma cells often accumulate in various bones, sometimes creating several tumors. The illness is called multiple myeloma when this happens. Journal impact factor provides a quantitative evaluation tool to grade, evaluate, sort and compare similar journals. It reflects the average number of citations to recent articles published in science and social science journals in a given year or period, and is often used as a proxy for a journal's relative importance in its field. It is first conceived by the Institute for Scientific Knowledge president, Eugene Garfield. A journal's impact factor is calculated by splitting the number of current year citations into the originating articles that were published in the journal in the past two years.  

High Impact List of Articles

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