
A specialist approach to medical translation
Ensuring your translation is in good health
Competitive prices: prior to each project, you will receive a quote including a full breakdown of costs
Flawless delivery, fast turnaround and simple set up
Personal service
Rigorous quality control
Continuous support whenever required
Member of the American Translators Association and member of the ProZ.com “certified pro network”
Data security and confidentiality
Highly specialized in the medical area with a PhD degree directly relevant to your field to guarantee the highest accuracy for complex specialist medical texts
Advanced analytical and scientific writing skills: experience in writing, editing, proofreading, and peer reviewing of research publications.
Extensive practical experience: firsthand knowledge of a wide range of scientific and medical laboratory procedures, tools, devices, and diagnostics
Highly familiar with scientific and clinical terminology
Experienced in statistical analysis and interpretation of biomedical data
Quality Assurance
Every single project entrusted to MedExPub is dictated by a commitment to deliver the highest quality translations. To achieve this, the translation processes is completed by the following QA steps:
Linguistic quality assurance to make sure the translation is clear, correct, concise and consistent.
Review of style to verify it is appropriate for the intended target audience.
Format and layout quality control for reproducing the layout of the source file.
Opportunity for client review to provide feedback and to make final improvements to the translation.
Over the years, MedExPub has been providing medical translation services for universities, hospitals, clinics, research institutes, independent medical professionals and healthcare providers.
Working with MedExPub is easy and straightforward. Send your text to be translated by email. Within an hour, you will receive a translation quote with the exact price and delivery time of you translation at no obligation. Upon your approval, your text will be translated into the target language and format and delivered on time to meet your deadline. Payment is due within 20 calendar days upon receipt of the finished translation by bank transfer or PayPal.
At all times, all information related to the project is handled with the highest degree of confidentiality and security. MedExPub provides non-disclosure agreements upon request. All documents submitted to MedExPub are fully protected with secure firewall protection, secure off-site storage, and document encryption.
Translation

Dutch to English and German to English translation of medical and biomedical texts by combining subject matter expertise, linguistic ability, and copywriting skills. This is followed by several quality assurance checks to verify completeness, accuracy, spelling, grammar, punctuation and formatting.
Proofreading

This is a careful review of a previously translated text against the original source text and other reference materials to assure the translation is faithful with respect to content, terminology, tone and style. Punctuation, grammar and spelling are also double-checked.
Editing

Centred on helping you perfect your writing and ensuring your manuscript is written in correct scientific English, editing involves a thorough revision of scientific terminology, grammar, redundancies, wordiness, overall clarity and organization.
WORKING LANGUAGESprueba
MedExPub provides translations from German and Dutch into English (US and GB)
Original research publications
Case reports
Reviews and literature studies
Meta-analysis
Abstracts
Presentations
Posters
Clinical and medical reports
Diagnostic reports
Protocols
Educational material
Regulatory documents
Health authorities opinions, approvals and authorizations
Patient data and medical records
Laboratory test results
Surgical procedures
Hospital/laboratory operations manuals
Discharge instructions
Patient instructions
General patient communication forms
Clinical study protocols
Doctor guides
Investigator brochures
Healthcare (general)
Surgical procedures
Cardiovascular disease
Cancer therapies
Gastroenterology
Medical biology
Medical diagnostics
Pharmacology
Clinical research
Medical devices
Clinical trials
Biotechnology
Statistical analysis
Word
PDF
PowerPoint
Excel
InDesign
Additional formats may be requested
PRICING
- Rates depend on various factors, such as total volume, technical difficulty, urgency, one-time translation vs. ongoing project, etc. Rates are calculated on a per-word-basis. For a free quote, please email your document or a representative sample to: j.rychter@agoratranslation.com. Preferred payment methods are bank transfer or PayPal. Payment is due within 20 calendar days upon receipt of the finished translation.
Send us an email
For any questions or queries please contact us using this form.
GENERAL ENQUIRIES
+34 (0) 679 00 92 88
Enric Casanovas 29 SA
08016 Barcelona, Spain
MEMBERSHIPS
CAREER BACKGROUND
- Mast cell degranulation inhibits motor patterns of human ileum and sigmoid colon in vitro: relevance for postoperative ileus. Rychter J, Ortega O, Berdun S, Arenas C, Lopez I, Espin F, Vergara P, Clave P. Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2015 May 13. doi: 10.1111/nmo.12589. [Epub ahead of print]
- Colonic smooth muscle cells and colonic motility patterns as a target for irritable bowel syndrome therapy: mechanisms of action of otilonium bromide. J Rychter, F Espin, D Gallego, P Vergara, M Jiminez, P Clave. Therap Adv Gastroenterol 7(4):156-66(2014)
- Intestinal inflammation in postoperative ileus: pathogenesis and therapeutic targets. J Rychter, P Clave. Gut 62(11):1534-5(2013)
- CGRP1 receptor activation induces piecemeal release of protease-1 from mouse bone marrow-derived mucosal mast cells
J Rychter, L van Nassauw, J-P Timmermans, LMA Akkermans, RHS Westerink, ABA Kroese. Neurogastroenterology and Motility 23(2):57-68(2011) - Impairment of intestinal barrier and secretory function as well as egg excretion during intestinal schistosomiasis occur independently of mouse mast cell protease-1. J Rychter, L. van Nassauw, JK Brown, E van Marck, PA Knight, HRP Miller, ABA Kroese, J-P Timmermans. Parasite Immunology 32:221-31(2010)
- Pretreatment but not treatment with probiotics abolishes mouse intestinal barrier dysfunction in acute pancreatitis.
J Rychter, L van Minnen, A Verheem, H Timmerman, G Rijkers, M Schipper, H Gooszen, L Akkermans, ABA Kroese. Surgery 145:157-67(2009) - On the contribution of mucosal mast cells to the regulation of mouse intestinal barrier function. J Rychter, Doctoral thesis (2010).
- Surgical intestinal manipulation increases gene expression of TrkA, CGRP, and PAR-2 in dorsal root ganglia in the rat. Berdun S, Rychter J, Vergara P. Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2016 Jun;28(6):816-26. Epub 2016 Feb 22.
- Effects of nerve growth factor antagonist K252a on peritoneal mast cell degranulation.
Berdun S, Rychter J, Vergara P. Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol. 2015 Nov 15;309(10):G801-6. - Peritoneal mast cell degranulation and gastrointestinal recovery in patients undergoing colorectal surgery. Berdun S, Bombuy E, Estrada O, Mans E, Rychter J, Clave P, Vergara P. Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2015 Jun;27(6):764-74.
- Immunoglobulinfree light chains reduce in an antigen-specific manner the rate of rise of action potentials of mouse non-nociceptive dorsal root ganglion neurons. Rijnierse A1, Kraneveld AD, Salemi A, Zwaneveld S, Goumans AP, Rychter JW, Thio M, Redegeld FA, Westerink RH, Kroese AB. J Neuroimmunol. 2013 Nov 15;264(1-2):14-23.
- Corticotropin-releasing factor, urocortin 1, and their receptors in the mouse spinal cord.Korosi A, Kozicz T, Richter J, Veening JG, Olivier B, Roubos EW. J Comp Neurol.
- 2011 to present: Medical translator, founder and owner of MedExPub
- 2010-2011: Post-doctoral researcher at the University of Barcelona (UAB).
- 2010-2011: Guest lecturer at the Pompeu Fabra University, Mataro, Spain
- 2006-2010: PhD in Physiology and Immunology at the Utrecht University, the Netherlands
- 2005-2006: Quality Assurance Coordinator, Department of pharmaceutical affairs, Sandoz/Novartis group, Almere, the Netherlands.
- 2005: MSc in Medical Biology from the Radboud University, the Netherlands.
- 2003: BSc in Medical Biology from the Radboud University, the Netherlands.