Journal articles sometimes contain a header (such as news, case report, or clinical study) at the top of the page to indicate a section of the issue. Do not include a header as part of the article title unless the table of contents for the journal issue indicates that it is.
Según:
Citing Medicine: The NLM Style Guide for Authors, Editors, and Publishers [Internet]. 2nd edition. Chapter 1: Journals
Related:
General Rules for Article Title (required) for Journal Articles Vancouver Style
Specific Rules #1 for Article Title (required) for Journal Articles Vancouver Style: Article titles not in English
Specific Rules #2 for Article Title (required) for Journal Articles Vancouver Style: Article titles in more than one language
Specific Rules #3 for Article Title (required) for Journal Articles Vancouver Style: Translated article titles ending in punctuation other than a period
Specific Rules #4 for Article Title (required) for Journal Articles Vancouver Style: Article titles containing a Greek letter, chemical formula, or another special character
Specific Rules #5 for Article Title (required) for Journal Articles Vancouver Style: Article titles with headers
Specific Rules #6 for Article Title (required) for Journal Articles Vancouver Style: No article title can be found
Exceptions for Article Title (required) for Journal Articles Vancouver Style
Examples for Article Title (required) for Journal Articles Vancouver Style
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