Journal of Modern Medicinal Chemistry
About the Journal
Editor-in-Chief: Rolf Teschke
Abbreviated Key Title: J. Mod. Med. Chem.
ISSN (Online): 2308-8044
Published by: Synergy Publishers
Periodicity: One volume per year – Open Access
Contact info@synergypublishers.com
Indexed in:
Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS), EZB Nutzeranfragen, Google Scholar, DAIJ, DRJI, WorldCat, Journal Rate, OA-Library, Open J-Gate, Knowledge Hub: Virtual Library, Scientific World Index, Science Library Index, Eurasian Scientific Journal Index (ESJI), Scientific Indexing Services
Aims & Scope
Journal of Modern Medicinal Chemistry (JMMC) provides as an international journal the reader with peer-reviewed publications on a broad range of chemical and biochemical aspects related to humans and their diseases. Medicinal chemistry is an exciting scientific discipline at the corner of medicine, pharmacology, pharmacy, pharmacovigilance, toxicology, and organic or inorganic chemistry.
Submissions are encouraged for the following topics:
- Drug development and research with principles of rational drug design
- Pharmacogenetics and Pharmacogenomics
- Benefit over risk constellation in drug treatment
- Randomized controlled trials (RCT) in drug treatment
- Causality assessment of adverse events and reactions associated with drug treatment
- Molecular basis and targets of drugs
- Drug-drug interactions
- Drug related pharmacovigilance
- Nature based, non herbal drug development
- Development of nature based medicinal products including herbs and phytochemicals
- Traditional medicine
- Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in herbal medicine
- Benefit versus risk ratio in herbal medicine in the context of other therapies
- Pharmacovigilance in herbal medicine
- Causality assessment of adverse events and reactions under herbal treatment
- Herb-herb and herb-drug interactions
- Toxic human diseases
- Biochemical, pathobiochemical and chemical aspects in human diseases and their target organs
- Novel animal models of human diseases
- Novel experimental data relevant for human disease