MEDLINE/PubMed:
Displays only the English language title for two or more equal languages, but indicates all languages of publication.
Omits the fonts of superscripts and subscripts when they cannot be reproduced and the meaning is not compromised. For example, H20 is commonly recognized as water; however, 106 will be displayed as 10(6).
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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