![]() ![]() It’s uses are mainly for surgery rotations (clerkships) and cadaver labs. Hoop’s is another gross anatomy lab deck that offers good value except for a comprehensive neuroanatomy section. You can download the Complete UMich Cadaver deck here. The perfect deck for learning anatomy online for free (for pre-meds and everyone else), the Complete UMich Cadaver deck is organised by the categorisation over at University of Michican Blue Link Atlas.Ī big fan of UMich’s stuff – I use their question banks and pathology stuff all the time – it’s amazing to have a resource like this that you can use to follow along with their content and build your anatomy understanding. Rohen’s Atlas is based on the same resource as Anatoking’s deck (Rohen) but is a little more tried and tested – I actually used this myself ahead of my tricky anatomy lab practicals too.īuilt on the same formatting (imageocclusion) as the Anettermy deck, estel95 (the creator of this deck), threw it together by taking high-res images of a legally acquired PDF version of the book and categorising it accordingly. It’s mostly clozed-format (fill in the gap) style.Ī very visual and fun deck to learn very high yield concepts of anatomy in no time at all. ![]() Learning about the pathologies that anatomical dysfunction causes, I managed to build a solid foundation on future medical topics using this deck.Īll the cards are based on St Matthew’s University School of Medicine 100 Most Important Gross Anatomy Concepts, put together by Dr. What I enjoyed about was it’s focus on clinical anatomy. I remember using Dorian’s Anatomy deck a couple years back when I was going through my anatomy finals. You can download Dope Anatomy from this page. ![]() This is the deck I used to ace to anatomy. This makes it much easier to work with sections of anatomy (lower limb: muscles etc) in an order that makes sense to you. There’s also a very helpful update on both the Dope Anatomy and Ranatomy decks that overhauls the tagging system. You can search for relevant cards for class and move them into a single Dope-based deck if you think that would help. It’s well worth downloading each part of Dope here as the Medical Science deck has lots of neuroanatomy cards available built off Nolte’s Neuroanatomy and Neuroanatomy Through Clinical Cases. Actually part of a three deck series with Medical Science and Clinical Medicine, the anatomy component is an update of the earlier Netter anatomy deck (no longer available). It looks like this…ĭope Anatomy is considered one of the gold standards when it comes to comprehensive anatomy decks. It’s tagging system makes it easy to work with too. Unlike the 2D cross-section representations of neuroanatomy that many flashcards use (namely Anking’s deck for Step 1), Apple’s Neuroanatomy uses histological slides and colored highlighting to teach the fundamentals.Īccording to users of the deck, it’s very centered on the high yield topics from neuro likely to show up on Step1. It’s based on the Interactive Neuroanatomy Atlas from Colombia University and includes cards on the brain stem, thalamus and spinal cord. Possibly too detailed for USMLE Step 1 but great for general MBBS anatomy courses.Īpple’s Neuroanatomy is a very short yet effective deck. The deck creator also suggests new updates (including a JPEG to PNG image conversion to save space) are on the way. This differs from the Dope Anatomy deck by offering several new cards testing different structures. Saving you time scanning the photo to find the number in question. Each card highlights the number of a structure on the front side of a card. What makes this deck great is its formatting. ![]() There are a few cards omitted from the deck due to copyright issues. Where it might be a bit sparse is neuroanatomy.
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