Sandbox:literature
Template:Literature review
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Seyedmahdi Pahlavani, M.D. [2]
Literature review
A literature review is a systematic, explicit, and reproducible method to identify, evaluate, and synthesize the existing published literature on a topic. It may include scholarly articles, textbooks, or websites. There are important steps to start your literature review:
- Select search question
- Select your search source
- Select the search terms
- Run your search
Search Question
Search question could be broad or narrow based on the specific topic that you want to contribute. Questions related to the microchapters that need general information, such as pathophysiology could be started with broad questions, such as what is the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus? And then be narrowed accordingly like, what is the role of beta cells dysfunction in pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes? Or even very narrow question like, what is the effect of the potassium pump block for insulin secretion in beta cells in type 2 diabetes?
Select Search Source
There are many different resources available including:
- Bibliographic databases:
- PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane library
- Websites:
- Associations, Organizations, and Government, such as WHO, CDC, ...
- Others:
- Web search