Retraction
Toward a new clinical classification of patients with familial hypercholesterolemia: One perspective from Spain
Paper Information
Record ID:
36225
Author(s):
Journal:
Publication Date:
April 26, 2019
Retraction Date:
April 26, 2019
(6.6 years years ago)
Subject:
Broad Categories:
Medicine
Medicine
Specific Fields:
Medicine - Cardiovascular
Medicine - Cardiovascular
Institutions:
- Expert group from the Spanish Arteriosclerosis Society
- Unitat de Medicina Vascular I Metabolisme. Hospital Universitari Sant Joan. Universitat Rovira I Virgili. IISPV. CIBERDEM, Reus, Spain
- Department of Medicine and Dermatology, Lipids and Atherosclerosis Laboratory, CIMES, University of Málaga, Virgen de La Victoria University Hospital, IBIMA, Málaga, Spain
- Unitat de Lípids I Risc Vascular. Hospital Del Mar. Departament de Medicina. Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
- Unidad de Lípidos, Hospital Universitario Miguel Servet, IIS Aragón, CIBERCV, Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain
- Lipid and Atherosclerosis Unit, Department of Internal Medicine / IMIBIC/Reina Sofia University Hospital/University of Cordoba, CIBEROBN, Spain
- Internal Medicine Unit, University Hospital Alcorcon Foundation, Rey Juan Carlos University, Madrid, Spain
- Internal Medicine Service, Hospital Carlos III, Madrid, Spain
- Lipids and Vascular Risk Unit, Internal Medicine, Hospital Universitario de Bellvitge, Hospitalet de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain
Country:
🇪🇸 SpainArticle Type:
Publisher:
Elsevier
Open Access:
Yes
PubMed ID:
Not indexed in PubMed
Retraction PubMed ID:
Not indexed in PubMed
Retraction Details
Citations (1)
1
Total Citations1
Post-Retraction(100.0%)
0
Pre-Retraction0
Same DayPost-Retraction Citation Analysis
1
Within 30 days
1
Within 1 year
0
After 2+ years
5
Days since retraction (latest)
Paper citing Toward a new clinical classification of patients w...
Unknown Authors
Unknown Journal
Published: May 2019
5 days after retraction
Quick Stats
Total Citations:
1
Years Since Retraction:
6.6 years
Open Access:
Yes
Last Checked:
Never