| Literature DB >> 27154247 |
Sa'ed H Zyoud1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dengue is an important emerging and re-emerging arboviral infection globally as a rapidly growing and widespread public health problem, with transmission occurring in more than 128 countries in Asia, Americas, southeast Africa, western Pacific, and eastern Mediterranean regions. Therefore, the aim of this study was to characterize and quantify the scientific output of dengue research in Arab countries relative to that worldwide by using a bibliometric analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Arab world; Bibliometric; Citations; Dengue; Scopus
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27154247 PMCID: PMC4859974 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-016-0534-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Fig. 1Numbers of dengue research literature trends in Scopus between 1872 and 2015 at the global and Arab levels
Top 10 most prolific countries of publications related to dengue in the world during 1872–2015 (n = 19,581)
| SCR | Countries | Articles (%) |
| Collaborations with foreign countries | Number (%)a of publications with international authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | United States | 4,709 (24.05) | 159 | 146 | 2,030 (43.11) |
| 2nd | India | 1,942 (9.92) | 52 | 106 | 1,012 (52.11) |
| 3rd | Brazil | 1,530 (7.81) | 60 | 113 | 440 (28.76) |
| 4th | Thailand | 1,260 (6.43) | 78 | 69 | 662 (52.54) |
| 5th | United Kingdom | 1,129 (5.77) | 92 | 126 | 803 (71.12) |
| 6th | France | 1,087 (5.55) | 76 | 147 | 609 (56.03) |
| 7th | Australia | 783 (4.00) | 68 | 100 | 393 (50.19) |
| 8th | Singapore | 774 (3.95) | 59 | 104 | 372 (48.06) |
| 9th | Malaysia | 628 (3.21) | 39 | 108 | 209 (33.28) |
| 10h | Japan | 618 (3.16) | 48 | 53 | 289 (46.76) |
SCR Standard competition ranking
aPercentage of publications with international authors from the total number of publications for each country
Bibliometric analysis of the 226 documents from the Arab world during 1968–2015
| SCRa | Countries | Total number of articles for the whole period (%) |
| Number of documents with international collaboration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | KSA | 102 (45.1) | 11 | 68 |
| 2nd | Egypt | 58 (25.7) | 15 | 49 |
| 3rd | Sudan | 21 (9.3) | 8 | 11 |
| 3rd | Kuwait | 21 (9.3) | 11 | 14 |
| 5th | Tunisia | 14 (6.2) | 7 | 11 |
| 6th | UAE | 10 (4.4) | 6 | 8 |
| 6th | Oman | 10 (4.4) | 3 | 5 |
| 8th | Yemen | 7 (3.1) | 5 | 7 |
| 8th | Morocco | 7 (3.1) | 5 | 3 |
| 10th | Qatar | 6 (2.7) | 2 | 6 |
| 11th | Jordan | 5 (2.2) | 5 | 4 |
| 11th | Bahrain | 5 (2.2) | 2 | 4 |
| 13th | Algeria | 4 (1.8) | 2 | 3 |
| 13th | Lebanon | 4 (1.8) | 3 | 3 |
| 15th | Palestine | 3 (1.3) | 3 | 3 |
| 16th | Iraq | 2 (0.9) | 2 | 2 |
| 16th | Somalia | 2 (0.9) | 2 | 2 |
| 16th | SAR | 2 (0.9) | 2 | 2 |
| 16th | Djibouti | 2 (0.9) | 1 | 1 |
| 20th | LAJ | 1 (0.4) | 1 | 1 |
SCR Standard competition ranking, KSA Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, UAE United Arab Emirates, SAR Syrian Arab Republic, LAJ Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
aEqual countries have the same ranking number, and then a gap is left in the ranking numbers
Fig. 2The most 11 internationally collaborative countries/territories with Arab world
The 10 most published journals worldwide during 1968–2015 (n = 19,581)
| SCR | Journal | Frequency (%) | IFa |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st |
| 755 (3.86) | 2.699 |
| 1st |
| 494 (2.52) | 4.446 |
| 3rd |
| 393 (2.01) | 0.719 |
| 4th |
| 391 (2.00) | 3.234 |
| 5th |
| 380 (1.94) | 4.439 |
| 6th |
| 254 (1.30) | NA |
| 7th |
| 229 (1.17) | 3.321 |
| 8th |
| 223 (1.14) | 6.751 |
| 9th |
| 212 (1.08) | 1.839 |
| 10th |
| 204 (1.04) | 3.624 |
SCR Standard competition ranking, NA Not available, IF Impact factor
aThe impact factor was reported according to the journal citation reports (JCR) 2014
The 10 most published journals from the Arab world during 1968–2015 (n = 226)
| SCRa | Journal | Frequency (%) | IFb |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st |
| 9 (4.0) | 2.098 |
| 1st |
| 9 (4.0) | NA |
| 3rd |
| 7 (3.1) | NA |
| 4th |
| 6 (2.7) | NA |
| 4th |
| 6 (2.7) | NA |
| 4th |
| 6 (2.7) | 2.699 |
| 4th |
| 6 (2.7) | 1.839 |
| 8th |
| 5 (2.2) | 2.347 |
| 8th |
| 5 (2.2) | 2.613 |
| 10th |
| 4 (1.8) | 3.234 |
| 10th |
| 4 (1.8) | 3.078 |
SCR Standard competition ranking, NA Not available, IF Impact factor
aEqual journals have the same ranking number, and then a gap is left in the ranking numbers
bThe impact factor was reported according to the journal citation reports (JCR) 2014
Top 10 most cited articles in Scopus related to dengue worldwide
| SCR | Authors | Title | Year of publication | Source title | Cited by |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Gubler [ | Dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever | 1998 |
| 1451 |
| 2nd | Bhatt et al. [ | The global distribution and burden of dengue | 2013 |
| 991 |
| 3rd | Halstead [ | Pathogenesis of dengue: Challenges to molecular biology | 1988 |
| 991 |
| 4th | Lanciotti et al. [ | Rapid detection and typing of dengue viruses from clinical samples by using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction | 1992 |
| 896 |
| 5th | Vaughn et al. [ | Dengue viremia titer, antibody response pattern, and virus serotype correlate with disease severity | 2000 |
| 807 |
| 6th | Gubler [ | Epidemic dengue/dengue hemorrhagic fever as a public health, social and economic problem in the 21st century | 2002 |
| 749 |
| 7th | Halstead [ | Dengue | 2007 |
| 720 |
| 8th | Guzmán and Kourí [ | Dengue: An update | 2002 |
| 718 |
| 9th | Kuhn et al. [ | Structure of dengue virus: Implications for flavivirus organization, maturation, and fusion | 2002 |
| 682 |
| 10th | Mackenzie et al. [ | Emerging flaviviruses: The spread and resurgence of Japanese encephalitis, West Nile and dengue viruses | 2004 |
| 645 |
SCR Standard competition ranking
Top 10 most cited articles in Scopus related to dengue from Arab world
| SCRa | Authors | Title | Year of publication | Source title | Cited by |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Boutayeb [ | The double burden of communicable and non-communicable diseases in developing countries | 2006 |
| 162 |
| 2nd | Chaturvedi et al. [ | Cytokine cascade in dengue hemorrhagic fever: Implications for pathogenesis | 2000 |
| 156 |
| 3rd | Raghupathy et al. [ | Elevated levels of IL–8 in dengue hemorrhagic fever | 1998 |
| 108 |
| 4th | Graham et al. [ | A prospective seroepidemiologic study on dengue in children four to nine years of age in Yogyakarta, Indonesia I. Studies in 1995–1996 | 1999 |
| 104 |
| 5th | Agarwal et al. [ | A clinical study of the patients with dengue hemorrhagic fever during the epidemic of 1996 at Lucknow, India | 1999 |
| 80 |
| 6th | Moutailler et al. [ | Potential vectors of rift valley fever virus in the Mediterranean region | 2008 |
| 70 |
| 7th | Chaturvedi et al. [ | Sequential production of cytokines by dengue virus-infected human peripheral blood leukocyte cultures | 1999 |
| 68 |
| 7th | Mustafa et al. [ | Elevated levels of interleukin–13 and IL–18 in patients with dengue hemorrhagic fever | 2001 |
| 68 |
| 9th | Abubakar et al. [ | Global perspectives for prevention of infectious diseases associated with mass gatherings | 2012 |
| 63 |
| 10th | Barniol et al. [ | Usefulness and applicability of the revised dengue case classification by disease: Multi-centre study in 18 countries | 2011 |
| 59 |
SCR Standard competition ranking
aEqual articles have the same ranking number, and then a gap is left in the ranking numbers
The top 10 most productive institutes at global level
| SCR | Institution, country | No. of documents (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 1st |
| 620 (3.17) |
| 2nd |
| 495 (2.53) |
| 3rd |
| 395 (2.02) |
| 4th |
| 309 (1.58) |
| 5th |
| 297 (1.52) |
| 6th |
| 294 (1.50) |
| 7th |
| 274 (1.40) |
| 8th |
| 255 (1.30) |
| 9th |
| 250 (1.28) |
| 10th |
| 230 (1.17) |
SCR Standard competition ranking
The top 10 most productive institutes from or collaborating with Arab world affiliations during the study period
| SCRa | Institution, country | No. of documents (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 1st |
| 32 (14.2) |
| 2nd |
| 17 (7.5) |
| 2nd |
| 17 (7.5) |
| 2nd |
| 17 (7.5) |
| 5th |
| 14 (6.2) |
| 6th |
| 10 (4.4) |
| 6th |
| 10 (4.4) |
| 6th |
| 10 (4.4) |
| 9th |
| 9 (4.0) |
| 10th |
| 8 (3.5) |
| 10th |
| 8 (3.5) |
SCR Standard competition ranking, KSA Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
aEqual institutes have the same ranking number, and then a gap is left in the ranking numbers