| Literature DB >> 19272131 |
Narayan Jana1, Sukumar Barik, Nalini Arora.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although eponyms are widely used in medicine, they arbitrarily alternate between the possessive and nonpossessive forms. As very little is known regarding extent and distribution of this variation, the present study was planned to assess current use of eponymous term taking "Down syndrome" and "Down's syndrome" as an example.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19272131 PMCID: PMC2667526 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-9-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
"Down syndrome" and "Down's syndrome" in 116 medical publications.
| American publications (n = 50) | European publications (n = 66) | *P value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Down syndrome | Down's syndrome | Down syndrome | Down's syndrome | ||
| Journal indexes | 19(86.4) | 3(13.6) | 5(20.8) | 19(79.2) | P < 0.001 |
| Textbook indexes | 21(75) | 7(25) | 9(21.4) | 33(78.6) | P < 0.001 |
| Both indexes | 40(80) | 10(20) | 14(21.2) | 52(78.8) | P < 0.001 |
Values are numbers (percentages). This table excluded 2 Asian and 2 Australian publications.
* χ2 test with Yates' correction
Number of articles retrieved following PubMed search with the terms (not text-word) "Down syndrome" and "Down's syndrome."
| Date of search | Number of articles with the term "Down syndrome" | Number of articles with the term "Down's syndrome" |
|---|---|---|
| June 19, 2008 | 21,988 | 23,191 |
| Within the last 5 years | 4,483 | 4,718 |
| Within the last 1 year | 950 | 1,022 |
| January 19, 2007 | 17,497 | 17,592 |
| August 23, 2005 | 15,462 | 15,714 |
Difference between 2 groups over the time period is not significant (p > 0.05).
Figure 1Trend in use of "Down's syndrome" versus "Down syndrome". Trend in use of possessive form i.e., "Down's syndrome" in PubMed archives since 1970. Percentage is calculated using a formula, 100X/(X+Y), where X and Y indicated the total number of articles retrieved by text-word search "Down's syndrome" and "Down syndrome," respectively. Over the last 20 years, this frequency is approximately halved (33.7% versus 16.5%; P < 0.001).