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  1. 1. * DR. MD. SHALEH MAHMUD ASAD RESIDENT MS COURSE, UROLOGY, PHASE - A, BSMMU.
  2. 2. Contents  Introduction  Different components of acknowledgement  Importance  Principles  Different systems/styles  Oxford system in details  Harvard system in details  Vancouver system in details
  3. 3. Introduction We are expected to acknowledge the books, journal articles and other sources of information that we use when preparing and completing our university work. This is done by briefly referring to (citing) the sources of information in the text of our work, and by producing a corresponding, alphabetical list of references (or a bibliography) at the end of our work. Citing a source of information in our own text:  The need for care and guidance (Pearson et al., 2007) is evident... or  As Pearson et al. states (2007, p.72), "The basis of evidence-based practice is, of course, evidence.“ The corresponding reference:  Pearson, A., Field, J., Ford, D. and Jordan, Z. (2007) Evidence-Based Clinical Practice in Nursing and Health Care: Assimilating Research, Experience and Expertise. 2nd ed. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.
  4. 4. Components of acknowledgement CITATION: Acknowledging within our text ,the document from which we have obtained information. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Is the list of publications we have consulted. REFERENCE: Is the detailed description of the document from which we have obtained the information. Reference list: Is presented in alphabetical order (by author) and lists all the references we have cited directly in our written text. The reference list is usually found at the end of a piece of written work. Footnotes: Are placed at the bottom of the page on which the reference appears. Endnotes : Are similar to footnotes but instead of being added to the bottom of each page they are grouped together at the end of the document. We use the term Notes to refer to a footnote or an endnote.
  5. 5. Importance Honest and professional citation of references provides part of the framework for sound written research:  because we must acknowledge the sources we have used to establish our arguments and criticisms;  the references enable other people to identify and trace the sources we have used for our ideas;  it helps avoid charges of plagiarism because it makes clear when we are using someone else's ideas and words.
  6. 6. Principles :  The way we acknowledge, cite the source in our text  The way we list our sources at the end of our work to enable identification  There are a variety of systems for bibliographies. Once we have selected a system, it is important that we stick to it consistently.  Most subjects and Faculties within the University have a preferred system. So have to consult with our department.
  7. 7. Reference Systems: There are several referencing systems- I. Oxford System II. Harvard System III. Vancouver System IV. APA (American Psychological Association) System V. IEEE (Institution of Electronic and Electrical Engineering) System VI. MLA (Modern Language Association) system VII. Turabian System
  8. 8. Oxford System
  9. 9. Text Citation  Citations in the body of the paper refer to footnotes at the bottom of the paper. They consist of a superscript (raised) number, generally at the end of a sentence.  Footnotes provide the bibliographic details of a source and appear at the bottom of the page. Footnotes are numbered consecutively throughout a chapter or paper. Kostof notes, 'Ggantija is a wholly manmade form, which is to say it is thought out and reproduceable'.1 __________________________________________ 1. S. Kostof, A history of architecture: settings and rituals, 2nd edn, Oxford University Press, New York, 1995, p. 35.
  10. 10. Repeat Citation When sources are referred to more than once in the footnotes, full bibliographic details do not need to be given after the initial footnote. Use 'ibid.' in a footnote where the immediately preceding footnote refers to the same source. 1. S. Kostof, A history of architecture: settings and rituals, 2nd edn, Oxford University Press, New York, 1995, p. 35. 2. ibid.  If it is the same source, but a different page, add the page number. 1. S. Kostof, A history of architecture: settings and rituals, 2nd edn, Oxford University Press, New York, 1995, p. 35. 2. ibid., p. 45.
  11. 11. 'op. cit.' and 'loc. cit.' While 'ibid.' is used for citing an immediately preceding footnote, 'op. cit' and 'loc. cit' are used for citing all other previously cited sources.  Use 'op. cit.' to refer to a work previously cited that has a different page number.  Use 'loc. cit' to refer to the same page of a previously cited work. 1. S. Kostof, A history of architecture: settings and rituals, 2nd edn, Oxford University Press, New York, 1995, p. 35. 2. R. Tansey & F. Kleiner, Gardner's art through the ages, 10th edn, Harcourt Brace College Publishers, Sydney, 1996, p. 29. 3. Kostof, op. cit., p. 46. 4. Tansey & Kleiner, loc. cit.
  12. 12. Quotation Citation  In the body of the text , have to use single quotation marks for short quotes of less than 30 words. Kostof notes, 'Ggantija is a wholly manmade form, which is to say it is thought out and reproduceable'.1  For quotes longer than 30 words, do not use quotation marks. Start the quote on a new line, indented and in a smaller font size. Morley-Warner suggests that students should focus on how journal articles in their subject are written and structured. She describes another benefit of this process: You will also gain a sense of the complexity of being an apprentice writer in an academic culture, or rather cultures, where expectations may vary from discipline to discipline, even subject to subject and where you can build a repertoire of critical thinking and writing skills that enable you to enter the academic debates, even to challenge.24
  13. 13. Reference List Books with one Author Author’s last name and first name; title; edition (if not 1st); place of publication and publisher, year of publication.  Bryman, Alan. Social research methods. 3rd ed. Oxford: Oxford university press, 2008. Books with two or more Authors  Fabozzi, Frank J., Modigliani, Franco and Jones, Frank J. Foundations of financial markets and institutions. 4th ed. Boston: Prentice Hall, 2010. Books which are Edited (Anthologies) For edited books include eds. in brackets after the name of the editor(s).  Allen, Jeffner and Young, Iris Marion (eds.). The thinking muse: feminism and modern French philosophy. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989.
  14. 14. Book Chapters Include : family name(s) and first name(s) of author(s) of book chapter; title of book chapter; In, title of book; first and family name(s) of editor(s) and ed(s) in brackets; edition (if not 1:st); page numbers of chapter; place of publication and publisher; year of publication.  Ellet, Elizabeth F.L. By rail and stage to Galena. In Prairie state: impressions of Illinois, 1673-1967, by travelers and other observers, Paul M. Angle (ed.), 271-79. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1968. E-books The same information should be provided as for printed books. For books that have been read or downloaded from a library website or bookshop we should add information about e-book at the end of the reference.  Bowen, Natasha K. & Guo, Shenyang. Structural equation modeling. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012. Available from: E-Book Library, (accessed 23 September 2010).
  15. 15. Some books whose copyright have expired are sometimes freely available on the internet. In those cases we should add the complete URL (http ://....) and access date, the date we downloaded/read the book. If the URL is very long it could be sufficient to use the URL of the web site where we found the book .  Daniel. Memory of a tree festival. Hamburg: Sommer Publishing, 1902. http://books.google.se/Smith,  http://www.treesandplantsmemoriesinsummer (Accessed 2012-05-21). Journal Articles Include : family name(s) and first name(s) of author(s); title of article; journal name; volume and issue; year of publication ; page numbers of article.  Lundmark, Linda. Economic Restructuring into Tourism in the Swedish Mountain Range. Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism 5, no. 1 (2005): 23–45.
  16. 16. Journal Article (4 or more Authors )  Spencer,M. et al., 'Analyzing the Order of Items in Manuscripts of "the Canterbury Tales"', Computers and the Humanities, vol. 37, no. 1, 2003, pp. 97-109. Journal Article (Electronic Database) Author, A., ‘Article Title’, Journal Title, volume, number, year, page/s. Available from: Name of Database, (accessed date).  Toffoletti, K. 'How is Gender-based Violence Covered in the Sporting News? An Account of the Australian Football League Sex Scandal', Women's Studies International Forum, vol. 30, no. 5, 2007, p. 427. Available from: ProQuest, (accessed 23 February 2010). Journal Article (Website)  Moore, K.R., 'Was Pythagoras Ever Really in Sparta?', Rosetta, no. 6 Spring, 2009, http://www.rosetta.bham.ac.uk, (accessed 10 September 2010).
  17. 17. Encyclopedias/Dictionaries For articles/entries in online encyclopedias include (if available): author of article, title of article, name of encyclopedia, year of publishing,; complete URL (http://.....) and date of access. If there is no author, use the title of the entry or article first.  Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Encyclopedia Britannica. 2010.  http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/142824/Creutzfeldt-Jakob-disease (Accessed 2010-10-30). Dissertations Include information about university of graduation and title of degree.  Eckerberg, Katarina. Environmental protection in Swedish forestry: a study of the implementation process. PhD diss., Umeå University, 1987.
  18. 18. Illustrations (photographs, figures, diagrams, tables etc.) Illustrations created by others are often protected by copyright. In those cases we need permission from the copyright owner before we can use the illustrations in our text. If possible always state the creator of the illustration in the reference list. If we use an illustration in our paper have to include a caption with the following information image number (e.g. Figure 1), title, creator of illustration and year.  Lennver, Anders. Night against procrastination [Photography]. 2012. http://www.ub.umu.se/nightagainstprocrastion/ (Accessed 2016-04-05).  State the name of the illustrator if different than the author of the work and page number of the illustration if available .  Hazel, Edward. Prague by day [Photography]. In Czech photography in the twenty-first century, S. Johnson (ed.), 32. Prague: Autumn Publishing, 2015.
  19. 19. Web Pages/Internet Sources A. Author, ‘Title of web section/article/document’, Title of website [medium], day month year, page/paragraph/section name, <URL>, accessed day month year.  S. Black, ‘Kevin Andrews prods the Sudanese in the woodpile’, Crikey [website], 9 June 2007, para. 4, <http://www.crikey.com.au>, accessed 3 May 2014. Newspaper Article Author, A., ‘Article Title’, Newspaper Title, Date, page/s.  Boyd, R., 'The City of Sordid Splendour', The Australian, 26 August 1964, p. 10.
  20. 20. HARVARD SYSTEM In-text citations  Book: single author ……………….(Holt 1997 ) or Holt (1997)  Book: 2 or 3 authors……………..( McCarthy, William & Pascale 1997 )  Book: more than 3 authors……( Bond et al. 1996 )  Book: no author…………………….( A history of Greece 1994 )  Book: editor………………………….( Jones 1998 )  Book: 2 or more editors…………( Bullinger & Warnecke 1985 )  Book: organisation as author…. ( Australian Bureau of Agriculture and Resource Economics 2001 )  Book: chapter or article in edited book….. ( Milkman 1998, p. 25 )  Book: different works by same author in same year……( Bond 1991a ) (Bond 1991b)
  21. 21.  Journal article:…………..( Jennings 1997 )  Website :………………………(University Library 2015)  Image with known creator available via the web………(Colli 2009)  Newspaper: ……………..(Devlin 2011)  Dictionary or Encyclopedia : ……………………The Macquarie dictionary ( 2010 )  Block quotations For quoting a long piece of text (more than 30 words), the actual quote should be in slightly smaller font and indented from the left hand margin to distinguish it from the surrounding text. For example – It was stated that: If any similar qualitative research is to be undertaken in the future, then stringent controls should be put in place to ensure such statistical anomalies do not occur through lack of methodological rigor, particularly through corruption of data inadequately stored and processes (Mullane 2006, p. 66).
  22. 22. Reference List Books with one Author Include : author’s last name and first name; year of publication; title; edition (if not 1st); place of publication and publisher.  Bryman, Alan. 2008. Social research methods. 3rd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Books with two or more Authors  Fabozzi, Frank J., Modigliani, Franco and Jones. 2010. Foundations of financial markets and institutions. 4th ed. Boston: Prentice Hall. Books that have editors (Anthologies) For edited books include (ed.) or (eds.) between the name of the editor and year of publication - as in the example.  Allen, Jeffner and Young, Iris Marion (eds.). 1989. The thinking muse: feminism and modern French philosophy. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  23. 23. E-books The same information should be provided as for printed books. For books that have been read or downloaded from a library website or bookshop, we should add the information that it is an e-book at the end of the reference.  Bowen, Natasha K. and Guo, Shenyang. 2012. Structural equation modeling. New York: Oxford University Press. E-book. Some books whose copyright have expired are sometimes freely available on the internet .In those cases we should add the complete URL (http ://....) or the link provided by the publisher and our date of access, the date we downloaded/read the book. It is allowed, and sometimes recommended to give the URL to the site. http://books.google.se/, rather than a very long URL that points directly to the book.  Smith, Daniel. 1902. Memory of a tree festival. Hamburg: Sommer Publishing. http://www.treesandplantsmemoriesinsummer (Accessed 2012-05-21).
  24. 24. Book Chapters Include (if available): last name(s) and first name(s) of author(s) of book chapter; year of publication; title of book chapter; In first and family name(s) of editor(s) and ed(s) in brackets. Title of book. edition (if not 1:st); place of publication and publisher; page numbers of chapter.  Malmberg, Anders. 2003. Beyond the cluster: local milieus and global connections. In Jamie Peck and Henry Wai-chung Yeung (eds.). Remaking the Global Economy. London: Sage Publications, 145-162. Journal Articles Include author(s); year of publication; title of article; journal name; volume and issue; page numbers of article.  Lundmark, Linda. 2005. Economic restructuring into tourism in the Swedish mountain range. Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism 5 (1): 23–45.
  25. 25. Electronic Journal Articles  Same information included as for journal articles (see example above) and a DOI-number. DOI (Digital Object Identifier) is used to uniquely identify an object such as an electronic article. DOI-numbers are permanent, which makes it possible to easily locate articles even if the URL of the article has changed. Articles are assigned DOI-numbers by major academic publishers.  If there is no DOI-number you should give the URL-link of the article and in some cases access date (mainly articles that are freely available on the internet). The publisher often states how to write the reference.  Lundmark, Linda. 2005. Economic restructuring into tourism in the Swedish mountain range. Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism 5 (1): 23–45. doi: 10.1080/15022250510014273.  Larsen, James E. and Blair, John P. 2009. The importance of police performance as a determinant of satisfaction with police. American Journal of Economics and Business Administration 1 (1): 1-10. http://www.scipub.org/fulltext/ajeba/ajeba111-10.pdf (Accessed 2010-09-29).
  26. 26. Newspaper Articles Include : author of article; year of publication; title of article; name of paper or magazine; day and month of the article.  Jowit, Juliette. 2010. Corporate lobbying is blocking food reforms, senior UN official warns. Guardian. 22 September. Conference Proceedings Lectures/presentations at conferences and seminars are published in anthologies called proceedings. Title, year and city of conference are to be included if known. Individual contributions to conference proceedings, if published in their totality (not abstract only) are treated as chapters in books.  Hall, C. Michael. 2007. North-south perspectives on tourism, regional development and peripheral areas. In Dieter K. Müller and Bruno Jansson (eds.), Tourism in peripheries : perspectives from the north and south, 19-38.
  27. 27. llustrations (photographs, figures, diagrams, tables etc.) Illustrations created by others are often protected by copyright. In those cases we need permission from the copyright owner before we use the illustrations in our text. If possible always state the creator of the illustration in the reference list.  Lennver, Anders. 2012. Night against procrastination [Photography]. http://www.ub.umu.se/nightagainstprocrastion/ (Accessed 2016-04-05). State the name of the illustrator if different than the author of the work. If available also provide page number of the illustration:  Hazel, Edward. 2015. Prague by day [Photography]. In S. Johnson. Czech photography in the twenty-first century. Prague: Autumn Publishing, 32.
  28. 28. REFERENCE LIST  Black R, Boyd P (2004) What’s new in prenatal diagnosis? Trends Urol Gynaecol Sex Health 9:9–11  Boyd PA, Keeling JW (2007) Congenital abnormalities, prenatal diagnosis and screening. In JW Keeling (ed) Fetal and Neonatal Pathology, 4th edn. Springer-Verlag, New York  Harrison MR (2006) The fetus as a patient. In JL Grosfeld, JA O’Neill, EW Fonkalsrud, AG Coran (eds) Pediatric Surgery. Mosby, Philadelphia, pp 77– 88  Lakhoo K (2007) Fetal counselling for congenital malformations. PSI 23:509–519  Lakhoo K et al (2006) Best clinical practice: surgical conditions of the fetus and newborn. Early Hum Dev 82(5):281–324  Puri P, Höllwarth ME (eds) (2006) Pediatric Surgery. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg  Sylvester K, Albanese CT (2005) The fetus as a patient. In KT Oldham, PM Colombani, RP Foglia, MA Skinner, (eds) Principles and Practice of Pediatric Surgery.
  29. 29. Vancouver System Vancouver is a numbered referencing style commonly used in medicine and science . It follows rules established by the International committee of Medical Journal Editors in 1978 at vancouver, now maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine. It is also known as Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts submitted to Biomedical Journals.
  30. 30. Citations in the text  Citation in text should have a unique number, assigned in the order of citation.  If, in our text, cite a piece of work more than once, the same citation number should be used.  We can write the number in brackets or as superscript. Citing one author  Recent research (1) indicates that the number of duplicate papers being published is increasing.  Recent research1 indicates that the number of duplicate papers being published is increasing.
  31. 31. Citing more than one piece of work at the same time If we want to cite several pieces of work in the same sentence, we will need to include the citation number for each piece of work. A hyphen should be used to link numbers which are inclusive, and a comma used where numbers are not consecutive. The following is an example where works 6, 7, 8, 9, 13 and 15 have been cited in the same place in the text. Several studies (6–9,13,15) have examined the effect of congestion charging in urban areas. Citing the author’s name in our text We can use the author’s name in our text, but we must insert the citation number as well.  As emphasised by Watkins (2) carers of diabetes sufferers ‘require perseverance and an understanding of humanity’ (p.1).
  32. 32. Citing more than one author’s name in text If a work has more than one author and want to cite author names in our text,have to use ‘et al.’ after the first author.  Simons et al. (3) state that the principle of effective stress is ‘imperfectly known and understood by many practising engineers’ (p.4). Citing works by the same author written in the same year If we cite a new work which has the same author and was written in the same year as an earlier citation, each work will have a different number.  Communication of science in the media has increasingly come under focus, particularly where reporting of facts and research is inaccurate (4,5).
  33. 33. Citing from works with no obvious author The citation to a work written by a ‘corporate’ author could appear in text as:  The Department of Health (6) advocates a national strategy for creating a framework to drive improvements in dementia services. Citing from chapters written by different authors Some books may contain chapters written by different authors. When citing work from such a book, the author who wrote the chapter should be cited, not the editor of the book. Secondary referencing  According to Colluzzi and Pappagallo as cited by Holding et al. (7) most patients given opiates do not become addicted to such drugs. Citing a direct quotation  Simons et al. (3) state that the principle of effective stress is ‘imperfectly known and understood by many practising engineers’ (p.4).
  34. 34.  Quotations longer than two lines should be inserted as a separate, indented paragraph.  Smith (7) summarises the importance of mathematics to society and the knowledge economy, stating that: ‘Mathematics provides a powerful universal language and intellectual toolkit for abstraction, generalization and synthesis. It enables us to probe the natural universe and to develop new technologies that have helped us control and master our environment, and change societal expectations and standards of living.’ (p.11)  We may want to insert one or two words in the quotation so that we complete sentence is grammatically correct. To indicate that we have inserted words into a quotation, these have to be enclosed in square brackets.  Smith (7) provides a number of reasons as to why mathematics is important, stating that it is ‘a powerful universal language and intellectual toolkit for abstraction, generalization and synthesis ... [and] enables us to probe the natural universe and to develop new technologies that have helped us control and master our environment, and change societal expectations and standards of living.’ (p.11)
  35. 35. The reference list This is list of all the sources that have been cited in the text of work. The list is inclusive showing books, journals etc. listed in one list, not in separate lists according to source type.  The reference list should be in numerical order and each number matches and refers to the one in the text.  The list should be at the end of the work.  Books, paper or electronic journal articles, etc., are written in a particular format that must be followed.
  36. 36. Book Author AA. Title(Italic). Place of publication. Series title and number (if part of a series). Edition(If any). Publisher; Publication year.  Rang HP, Dale MM, Ritter JM, Moore PK. Pharmacology. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone; 2003.  Sherlock S, Dooley J. Diseases of the liver and biliary system. 11th ed. Oxford: Blackwell Science; 2002. Book with editors Aron JL, Patz JA.( eds.) Ecosystem change and public health: a global perspective. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; 2001. Book chapter Author of the chapter, Title of chapter , Editor (ed.), Title of book , Series title and number (if part of a series),Edition (if not the first edition), Place of publication (if there is more than one place, use the first named), Publisher, Year of publication, Page numbers (use ‘p.’ before single and multiple page numbers)  Svensson L. Skills in learning. In: Marton F, Hounsell D, Entwistle N.( eds.) The experience of learning. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press; 1984. p. 56-70. .
  37. 37. Book with an organization as author  Royal Adelaide Hospital; University of Adelaide, Department of Clinical Nursing. Compendium of nursing research and practice development, 1999-2000. Adelaide (Australia): Adelaide University; 2001. Journal articles Author. Title of journal article. Title of journal (this should be in italics). Year of publication. Volume number(Issue number). Page numbers of the article.  Chhibber PK, Majumdar SK. Foreign ownership and profitability: Property rights, control, and the performance of firms in Indian industry. Journal of Law & Economics. 1999;42(1): 209–238.  Journal article, more than six authors  Mayxay M, Newton PN, Yeung S, Pongvongsa T, Phompida S, Phetsouvanh R, et al. Short communication: an assessment of the use of malaria rapid tests by village health volunteers in rural Laos. Trop Med Int Health. 2004;9(3):325-9.
  38. 38. Journal article: online / electronic Most online articles will have a DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and we should use this in our reference. The DOI is a permanent identifier provided by publishers so that the article can always be found. If there is no DOI then we should use the URL.  Arrami M, Garner H. A tale of two citations. Nature. 2008;451(7177): 397–399. Availablefrom:http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v451/n7177/full/451397a.html [Accessed 20th January 2015].  Wang F, Maidment G, Missenden J, Tozer R. The novel use of phase change materials in refrigeration plant. Part 1: Experimental investigation. Applied Thermal Engineering. 2007;27(17–18): 2893–2901. Available from: doi:10.1016/j. applthermaleng.2005.06.011 [Accessed 14th July 2015]. Web page / website Author / Editor (use the corporate author if no individual author or editor is named). Title (this should be in italics). Available from: URL. [Date of access]  European Space Agency. Rosetta: rendezvous with a comet. Available from: http://rosetta.esa.int [Accessed 15th June 2015].
  39. 39. Conference proceeding: individual paper Author. Title of conference paper. In : Editor / Organisation (if it is an editor always put (ed.) Title . Place of publication. Publisher. Year of publication. Page numbers.  Wittke M. Design, construction, supervision and long-term behaviour of tunnels in swelling rock. In: Van Cotthem A, Charlier R, Thimus J-F, Tshibangu J-P. (eds.) Eurock 2006: multiphysics coupling and long term behaviour in rock mechanics: Proceedings of the International Symposium of the International Society for Rock Mechanics, EUROCK 2006, 9–12 May 2006, Liège, Belgium. London: Taylor & Francis; 2006. p. 211–216. Dictionary  Oxford concise medical dictionary. 9th rev ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2015. Hebephrenia; p. 241. Tables and figures  Kilmartin T. Hallux valgus and related problems of the forefoot. Podiatry Now. 2015;18(6):1-11. Figure 4a, Mild hallux valgus; p. 4.
  40. 40. REFERENCES 1. Campbell’s Operative Orthopaedics, 10th edn. ST Canale. St Louis: Elsevier Mosby, 2003. 2. Standard Orthopaedic Operations, 4th edn. JC Adams, CA Stossel. Edinburgh: Elsevier Churchill Livingstone, 1992. 3. The Closed Treatment of Common Fractures. J Charnley. London: Greenwich Medical Media, 2002. 4. Manual of Internal Fixation – techniques recommended by the ASO-ASIF group, 3rd edn. ME Muller, M Allgower, P Schneider, H Willennegger. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1990. 5. Bircher MD. Indications and techniques of external fixation of the injured pelvis. Injury 1996; 27 (Suppl. 2): S-B3-19. 6. Mucha P, Welch TJ. Haemorrhage in major pelvic fractures. Surg Clin North Am 1988; 68: 757–73. 7. Ates,alp AS, Erler K, Gur E, et al. Below-knee amputations as a result of land-mine injuries: comparison of primary closure versus delayed primary closure. J Trauma 1999; 47: 724–7. 8. Swanson AB. The Krukenberg procedure in the juvenile amputee. J Bone Joint Surg 1964; 46A: 1540–8.
  41. 41. THANK YOU HAVE A NICE DAY……………

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