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| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
The project looked promising. We planned to determine,
using a rat model, whether chemotherapy-induced damage to an endocrine gland could be modified by endocrine manipulation induced before and
during chemotherapy. We had an excellent team
Gerry, Ian, Barry, and
myself (Steve)
and everyone was making a significant contribution.
This was my first real attempt at being involved in research that
tested a hypothesis as opposed to more clinically orientated
observation. I felt that it represented a genuine step forward in my
research profile and my hopes were raised further when within less than
two years the results of the study supported the initial hypothesis.
So it was time to publish our findings and, as a mere clinician
involved in basic science experimentation for the first time, I chose
to rely on the experience of my senior colleague from the medical
school. He chose a high impact American journal, the referees
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What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+