International Journal of Vasculitis

International Journal of Vasculitis

International Journal of Vasculitis – Indexing

Open Access & Peer-Reviewed

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Open Access & Peer-Reviewed

International Journal of Vasculitis - Indexing and Abstracting

Discovery pathways that support visibility and citation integrity

Current Indexing Coverage

International Journal of Vasculitis distributes metadata through trusted scholarly infrastructure so published articles are discoverable by researchers and clinicians worldwide.

Indexing supports citation integrity and persistence, while discovery platforms increase visibility across rheumatology, immunology, and vascular medicine communities.

Crossref DOI registration supports citation integrity, while discovery services such as Google Scholar and WorldCat improve findability.

We update indexing information as coverage changes and do not claim inclusion where approval has not been granted.

Structured metadata and persistent identifiers help improve discovery and citation matching for vasculitis research.

Metadata distribution improves visibility across discovery services and library systems.

CrossMark signals the current status of articles and supports version tracking.

Similarity Check screening strengthens integrity by identifying overlapping content.

Discovery platforms index content based on metadata quality and structured crawling.

Author identifiers such as ORCID improve attribution across indexing services.

Reliable metadata improves matching between articles, datasets, and trial records.

Consistent author affiliations improve institutional tracking and reporting.

Indexing Highlights

1

CrossMark

Version control signals current article status and corrections.

2

Similarity Check

Crossref Similarity Check supports originality and integrity.

3

Google Scholar

Improves search visibility for vasculitis research.

4

WorldCat

Library catalog coverage supports institutional discovery.

Discovery Pathways

Discovery

Visibility depends on reliable metadata and discovery services.

  • Search engines and academic crawlers
  • Library catalogs and institutional records

Discovery Table

PathwayPurposeNotes
Search enginesSearch visibilityGoogle Scholar discovery
Library catalogsInstitutional accessWorldCat records
Open discoveryResearch discoveryOpenAlex, CORE, BASE

PubMed Status

Only NIH funded articles deposited in PMC appear in PubMed. Not all articles are indexed there.

Metadata Quality

Accurate titles, affiliations, and ORCID identifiers improve indexing and citation matching.

How Indexing Works

Step 1

Metadata Preparation

Structured metadata is created during production to improve discovery.

Step 2

Crossref Services

CrossMark and Similarity Check support integrity and version tracking.

Step 3

Discovery Crawling

Platforms such as Scholar, OpenAlex, CORE, and BASE index new content.

Discovery Services

Google Scholar WorldCat OpenAlex CORE BASE Semantic Scholar Crossref DOI

Indexing Notes

Indexing coverage depends on eligibility and service criteria.

We provide accurate status information to protect author credibility.

Contact the editorial office for verification needs.

Indexing FAQs

How fast are articles indexed?

Most discovery platforms index new content within 24 to 48 hours.

Are all articles in PubMed?

Only NIH funded articles deposited in PMC appear in PubMed.

Why is metadata quality important?

Structured metadata improves retrieval, citation accuracy, and attribution.

Publish with Indexing-Ready Metadata

Submit your manuscript to ensure your vasculitis research is discoverable across the research ecosystem.

Submit via ManuscriptZone Simple Manuscript Submission

Need help? Contact us at [email protected]