Journal of Spleen And Liver Research

Journal of Spleen And Liver Research

Journal of Spleen And Liver Research – Aim And Scope

Open Access & Peer-Reviewed

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Aims & Scope

Journal of Spleen and Liver Research (JSLR) publishes rigorous scientific and clinical investigations advancing understanding of hepatic and splenic physiology, pathology, and therapeutics across the translational research spectrum.
Hepatology Splenic Disorders Liver Disease Transplantation Molecular Mechanisms Clinical Outcomes
Scope Boundary: We do NOT consider manuscripts focused primarily on gastrointestinal organs beyond the liver (stomach, intestines, esophagus) unless directly related to hepatic or splenic pathophysiology. General gastroenterology without liver/spleen involvement is out of scope.

Research Scope

Tier 1: Core Domains

Hepatic Pathophysiology

  • Viral hepatitis (Hepatitis B, C, and emerging strains)
  • Autoimmune hepatitis and primary biliary cholangitis
  • Metabolic liver diseases (Wilson's disease, hemochromatosis, galactosemia)
  • Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and steatohepatitis (NASH)
  • Cirrhosis pathogenesis and complications
  • Hepatic encephalopathy mechanisms
Typical Fit:

Molecular mechanisms of hepatocyte injury in NASH progression; biomarker validation for cirrhosis staging; immune responses in chronic hepatitis C.

Hepatobiliary Oncology

  • Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) biology and therapeutics
  • Cholangiocarcinoma pathogenesis
  • Tumor microenvironment and immunotherapy
  • Molecular profiling and precision oncology
  • Surveillance strategies and early detection
  • Locoregional and systemic treatment outcomes
Typical Fit:

Genomic predictors of HCC recurrence post-resection; immune checkpoint inhibitor efficacy in advanced liver cancer; liquid biopsy for early HCC detection.

Splenic Disorders & Immunology

  • Splenomegaly etiology and management
  • Hypersplenism and cytopenias
  • Splenic infarction and vascular disorders
  • Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) with splenic involvement
  • Splenic abscess and infectious complications
  • Functional asplenia and post-splenectomy outcomes
Typical Fit:

Predictors of response to splenectomy in ITP; imaging characteristics of splenic lesions; immune reconstitution after splenectomy in hematologic disorders.

Transplantation & Regenerative Medicine

  • Liver transplantation outcomes and immunosuppression
  • Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT)
  • Graft rejection and tolerance mechanisms
  • Hepatocyte transplantation and bioartificial liver
  • Stem cell therapies for liver regeneration
  • Machine perfusion and organ preservation
Typical Fit:

Long-term outcomes of LDLT in pediatric patients; biomarkers of acute cellular rejection; mesenchymal stem cell therapy for acute liver failure.

Tier 2: Secondary Focus Areas

Advanced Diagnostics

Novel imaging modalities (elastography, contrast-enhanced ultrasound, MRI), biomarker discovery, liquid biopsy technologies, and AI-assisted diagnostic tools for liver and spleen pathology.

Interventional Procedures

Minimally invasive techniques including transarterial chemoembolization (TACE), radiofrequency ablation, portal vein embolization, and endoscopic interventions for hepatobiliary disease.

Metabolic & Nutritional Aspects

Hepatic metabolism of carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids; nutritional management in liver disease; metabolic syndrome and liver dysfunction; albumin and bilirubin metabolism.

Pharmacology & Toxicology

Drug-induced liver injury (DILI), hepatotoxicity mechanisms, pharmacokinetics in liver disease, and therapeutic drug monitoring in hepatic impairment.

Surgical Innovations

Hepatobiliary surgical techniques, laparoscopic approaches, robotic surgery, splenectomy indications and outcomes, and surgical management of portal hypertension.

Epidemiology & Public Health

Disease burden studies, screening programs, health disparities in liver disease, epidemiological trends in viral hepatitis, and population-based outcomes research.

Tier 3: Emerging & Interdisciplinary Areas

Editorial Note: Manuscripts in emerging areas undergo additional editorial review to ensure alignment with journal scope and sufficient methodological rigor. Authors should clearly articulate relevance to hepatic or splenic research.

Artificial Intelligence Applications

Machine learning for disease prediction, deep learning in medical imaging interpretation, natural language processing for clinical data extraction, and AI-driven drug discovery in hepatology.

Microbiome-Liver Axis

Gut-liver interactions, microbiome alterations in liver disease, fecal microbiota transplantation, and microbial metabolites affecting hepatic function.

Precision Medicine

Pharmacogenomics in hepatology, personalized treatment algorithms, multi-omics integration, and patient stratification strategies for targeted therapies.

Bioengineering & Devices

Liver-on-chip models, 3D bioprinting of hepatic tissue, wearable biosensors for liver function monitoring, and implantable devices for hepatic support.

Out of Scope

Primary Gastrointestinal Disorders

Rationale: Manuscripts focused on esophageal, gastric, small intestinal, or colorectal pathology without direct hepatic or splenic involvement (e.g., isolated gastroenteritis, appendicitis, irritable bowel syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, colorectal cancer) are outside our scope. Consider gastroenterology-specific journals.

Pancreatic Disorders (Primary Focus)

Rationale: While we accept manuscripts on pancreatic disease with significant hepatobiliary implications (e.g., biliary obstruction from pancreatic cancer), primary pancreatic pathology (acute/chronic pancreatitis, pancreatic cancer without liver involvement) should be submitted to pancreas-focused journals.

Gallbladder Disease (Isolated)

Rationale: Isolated gallbladder pathology (cholecystitis, cholelithiasis) without hepatic complications or biliary tree involvement is better suited for general surgery or gastroenterology journals. We accept manuscripts when gallbladder disease impacts liver function.

General Obesity & Metabolic Syndrome

Rationale: Manuscripts on obesity or metabolic syndrome without specific focus on hepatic manifestations (NAFLD/NASH) are out of scope. General metabolic research should target endocrinology or metabolism journals.

Hematologic Malignancies (Primary)

Rationale: While we consider splenic involvement in hematologic disorders, primary hematologic malignancies (leukemia, lymphoma) without significant splenic pathology focus should be submitted to hematology journals.

Article Types & Editorial Priorities

Priority 1: Fast-Track Review

High-Impact Contributions

Priority 2: Standard Review

Valuable Contributions

Rarely Considered

Limited Acceptance

Note: Case reports are considered only when they present unprecedented clinical scenarios, novel diagnostic approaches, or unique therapeutic insights with significant educational value. Single-patient observations without broader implications are typically declined.

Editorial Standards & Requirements

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Reporting Guidelines

Adherence to CONSORT (trials), STROBE (observational), PRISMA (reviews), ARRIVE (animal studies), and STARD (diagnostics) is mandatory.

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Data Transparency

Raw data, code, and protocols must be deposited in recognized repositories. Data availability statements required for all empirical research.

Ethics Compliance

IRB/IACUC approval required. Clinical trials must be prospectively registered. Informed consent documentation mandatory for human subjects research.

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Preprint Policy

Preprint posting encouraged and does not preclude consideration. Authors must disclose preprint DOI upon submission.

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Peer Review

Single-blind peer review by minimum two independent experts. Authors may suggest or exclude reviewers with justification.

Conflict of Interest

Full disclosure of financial and non-financial competing interests required from all authors, reviewers, and editors.

Publication Metrics & Timeline

21 Days to First Decision
56% Acceptance Rate
4 Days to Publication
Open Access Model

Article Processing Charges (APC): JSLR operates on an open-access model with transparent APC structure. Waivers available for authors from low-income countries and unfunded research. Contact editorial office for waiver requests before submission.

Submission Decision Framework

✓ Submit if your manuscript:

Addresses hepatic or splenic pathophysiology, diagnosis, or treatment; presents rigorous methodology with reproducible results; advances clinical practice or scientific understanding; fits within Tier 1 or Tier 2 scope areas.

❓ Uncertain? Contact us if:

Your research spans multiple organ systems; you're working in an emerging interdisciplinary area; your methodology is novel and may require specialized review; you need clarification on scope boundaries.

✗ Do not submit if:

Primary focus is on non-hepatic GI organs; research lacks liver/spleen relevance; methodology is preliminary or underpowered; manuscript is purely descriptive without mechanistic or clinical insights.