Announcements

The latest Impact Factors have been released and are updated in our site!

Not a Current Subscriber?

Subscribe Now

5631 Journals
4466 Congresses
10000+ Unique Records

Circulation: Heart Failure


Title Abbreviation
Circ Heart Fail
ISSN
1941-3289
Electronic ISSN
1941-3297
Readership
Cardiologists, Cardiovascular Surgeons, Epidemiologists, Researchers, Vascular Medicine Specialists
Scope
Circulation: Heart Failure considers for publication content related to heart failure, mechanical circulatory support and heart transplant science and medicine, including studies conducted in humans or analyses of human data, as well as preclinical studies that have direct clinical correlation or relevance. As a primarily clinical journal, few basic and preclinical studies are ultimately published. Those that will be considered are novel, and significantly and directly advance the field of heart failure. The editors are especially interested in basic science studies directly related to heart failure that are highly informative and translatable to human disease and are conducted in vertebrate models. Less than 15% of submitted articles are ultimately published. Work not directly involving heart failure or heart failure therapies will not be considered, including work on mechanisms of myocardial infarction, reperfusion injury, or arrhythmia in the absence of heart failure substrate.
Sponsoring Association(s)
American Heart Association (AHA)
Publisher Name
Wolters Kluwer Health - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins - PA
To see more details about Circulation: Heart Failure, Subscribe Now!
Impact Factor Electronic Circulation Submission to Acceptance Acceptance to Online Publication Frequency Journal Contact Author Submission Guidelines

Testimonials

"PubsHub [Journals & Congresses] is an indispensable tool when trying to find the perfect home for a manuscript. It is an unbeatable aid when it comes to wise and efficient journal selection."
 
– Kait G
Editorial-Project Editor
"It’s useful for establishing publication timelines, communicating them to management and setting expectations accordingly"
– Michael K.
Medical Communications Leader
"…a gold mine of information for clinicians and scientists who are trying to determine where to publish their research."
- Weill Cornell Medical Library