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| Step I Discuss strategies and issues for the USMLE and COMLEX Step 1. | RSS: |
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#1 |
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Member
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So now I'm going through CMMRS and I'm glad that I'm understanding some concepts that I didn't during my class, but I get really frustrated when I try to apply that knowledge to Qbanks (Kaplan and Uworld). The ones I have trouble with are the three part questions where you have to identify the organism than answer a question about that organism. I feel like I need a way to drill the basic, one-part information first, but I think making my own flashcards at this point would be take too much time (my test in at the end of June and I still have a lot to get through). Any suggestions? From the reviews of Micro Cards it seems like those have more info per card than I'm looking for. I haven't heard much about Deja Review, anyone tried it? Or should I just suck it up and make flashcards out of FA? Thanks!
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#2 |
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Stressed Applicant
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I recommend the latter - memorizing the crap out of the micro FA section. After I took my first practice test I realized micro was far and away my worst subject. I studied the FA section a little everyday, trying to memorize the mnemonics for stuff like the encapsulated bacterium, the naked viruses, the culture medias, the exotoxins, everything about every bacterium (lol), etc. After doing this, I did significantly better on the uworld micro questions, although I still had a lot to learn from them. Now I'm actually excited to see a micro question pop up on a practice NBME test, rather than being terrified. So yeah, make some flashcards and quiz yourself over and over. You don't have to learn it all in a day, take it one part at a time. Just my experience.
Last edited by NightSwim; 04-19-2012 at 01:37 PM. |
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#3 |
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fourth year
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flashcards of whatever type. it took me the longest time to accept that i needed the crutch, but drilling them really is the only way. i used GT, but the highly rated ones in the back of FA are also very effective from what i understand.
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I love medical school, too
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#4 |
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Senior Member
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#5 |
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about:blank
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I drilled with microcards during my class and have been using GT since then. Hard part if trying to figure out what bug presents like that scenario in the Qbank since it's all downhill form there if you know the classic stuff about each of them.
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To each to his or her own~ |
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#6 |
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Member
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Funny, I'll basically only use GT now for Micro stuff although I ended up with over 70% banked. It was taking me too long to get through GT by itself so I scrapped it for more qbanks. But the micro section a lone makes it great.
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#7 |
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Member
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I did GT pretty much exclusively for the microbio content, and found it very effective. Micro ended up being a big strength by the time test day rolled around. The GT micro section is very complete, and will help you breeze through the FA section, as well as your qbanks. It's painful, but it works.
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#8 |
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Below the fray
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I picked up a used copy of Microcards for $10 because of the rave reviews around here. I haven't really fallen in love with them like some other people have, but I'll keep at it...
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#9 |
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Member
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Thanks for the input! I never really looked into GT before, just signed up for the free trial!
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#10 |
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Senior Member
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#11 |
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Senior Member
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#12 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 365
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#13 |
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Below the fray
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For me, a useful tool with micro studying is just reviewing it in different ways with different materials. For instance, I went through CMMRS and FA micro with a study group in 2nd year. I don't remember any of it now, but when I looked through it in FA again, it was vaguely familiar. And even after that, I wasn't doing particularly well on UW/Kaplan micro questions, but my performance has gradually improved as I pick up bits of micro here and there from studying systems or doing questions. And now I'm making another FA pass with the help of DIT, and the micro parts are a lot more palatable than they were initially.
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#14 |
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Senior Member
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#15 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 365
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Quote:
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#16 |
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Senior Member
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#17 |
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Below the fray
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#18 |
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Member
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I wouldn't recommend purchasing GT just for the step micro at this point BUT they usually run free trials sometimes 2 weeks to a month. If that's the case, it's definitely worth grabbing it and using it just bank all the Micro/Immuno Cards on the first day you get it. You'll have a daily review to make sure you don't forget anything but it probably won't be more than 100 cards a day which would take about 30-45 minutes to get through.
On another note, I haven't used my GT in awhile and I have like 1000 questions due to today plus a few thousand for review...so overwhelming..glad I quit it but for select purposes it is worthwhile. |
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#19 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
The fact that we can retain as much as we can is amazing.
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"Top results are reached only through pain. But eventually you like this pain. You'll find the more difficulties you have on the way, the more you will enjoy your success." Juha Väätäinen |
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#20 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
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#21 | |
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2K Member
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#22 |
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Senior Member
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#23 |
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2K Member
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np
![]() edit: i just wanted to point out in my previous point that the user's experience in not having so many daily questions is atypical since he has very good retention of the material. Last edited by FIREitUP; 04-20-2012 at 09:32 AM. |
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#24 |
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Senior Member
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While I'm a big GT Fan, I prefer to make my own flashcards for Micro since its my weakest area. Making cards seems to help me actual memorize a lot more details then simply doing the GT cards. Also I have been putting each cards into categories of 50 questions each, which seems to also help. The information from the cards is from FA and once I have those down I will add extra information from Qbanks.
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#25 | |
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Senior Member
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I quit GT also. It's not for everyone. |
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#26 |
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Below the fray
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#27 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 365
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Quote:
Sherlock Holmes
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“You know what, this is what addicts do. The second they start making progress they screw up. Because deep down they think it’s only a matter of time before they fail. They’d rather fall from the third floor than the penthouse.” -Harvey Specter |
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#28 |
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2K Member
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I went through the Sanjiv Microcards before having read FA (I probably spent ~60 total hours on them, if not more). Then I did the micro from FA.
Out of the 25 subjects in Rx QBank, micro is my strongest. I owe any questions I've gotten right about organism-classification to the Microcards. FA is necessary for knowing about the various toxins and mechanisms of action, etc., but the Microcards are for memorizing the tree-algorithms so that you know the classifications of all organisms. Out of any resource I've used for Step1 prep (and I own ~50 [I'm one of those people]), excluding FA and the QBanks, the Microcards rank #1. |
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#29 | |
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2K Member
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To be honest, all you need to know is the stuff in First Aid. I try and go through it everyday for 30 minutes just to refresh myself on bugs and then do a random block of 20 microbiology question from UWorld or Qbank. To be honest, that's the best way to keep up with both micro and pharm (at least from what I've been finding). For instance, review CV pharm. Do a block of CV-only pharm questions. Next day, do Pulm Pharm. Do CV+Pulm random block of pharm questions, etc. Same goes for Microbiology. It'll depend on how you learn, but I think the QBanks + FA are sufficient learning tools for knowing bugs and associations cold. Drugs too. There's very little on those subjects that you can't look up in First Aid. Also....remember that Step 1 is a tricky, but straight-forward exam. They always present you with the very typical presentation of a disease and ask you something about it. Most of your questions on this subjects will be gauged on the more high yield facts and exceptions to the rule. I.e. they're more likely to want you to know that parvovirus is the only ssDNA virus than recognizing that Polyomaviruses are dsDNA.
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MS2 (almost MS3) |
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#30 | |||||
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2K Member
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The test is too variable to draw conclusions like that. |
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#31 |
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Senior Member
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Didn't want to start new thread...so, here's the question:
HCV being enveloped RNA virus forms its envelope by budding from: - host intracellular membrane (for example nucleus membrane); - host plasma membrane? When I first read RR Micro (can't find the exact page now) I did a note in FA that virus replicating in cytoplasm uses intracellular membranes phospholipids for its envelope. And now explanation for UW question #1408 states that it uses plasma membrane. So, where's the truth? Edit: and btw do they really think that we are able to remember not only freaking viral families, who is ss or ds or segmented, who has envelopes but also remember where did this or that virus get its envelope?? Last edited by Convalaria; 04-25-2012 at 07:47 PM. |
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#32 | |
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Senior Member
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#33 |
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Senior Member
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since it is RNA virus?
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#34 | |
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2K Member
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When I see the charts in FA, I literally think, "if I were just trying to memorize this info via these charts, there's no way...thank Gd I've gone through the Microcards." |
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#35 |
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Senior Member
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#36 | |
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Senior Member
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If only I knew about them when I studied micro first time, that would have made easier the whole process but so far, having done maaaany notes on micro section in FA, I like it ![]() thank you! |
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#37 |
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Senior Member
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Can anyone compare Sanjiv cards to GT?
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#38 |
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Senior Member
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Microcards are the gold standard in my opinion. The FA chapter is horribly organized for micro. Microcards impose a much-needed framework for study. I used them during micro in school so when I used them for Step 1 study it was returning to a comfortable source. I can't speak for jumping into using them when the heat is on for boards study.
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#39 |
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2K Member
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Absolutely the gold-standard. In terms of GT, I can't relate to that. In terms of Rx, Microcards + FA alone have made micro my strongest (mostly due to the former).
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#40 |
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Senior Member
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stickin with Microcards + FA + Uworld! things are slowly starting to come together. it is unfortunately IMO one of those subjects you just gotta hammer in there.
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#41 |
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2K Member
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I personally feel like memorizing the Gram +/- flow charts in First Aid + the salient features of each bug (toxins, special culture conditions, morphology, typical disease associations and epidemiolgoy, etc.) is sufficient. A lot of this you should have picked up gradually (especially epidemiology and disease associations) during your second year. I've only been using First Aid and feel that I've never had a problem looking up answers to anything I got wrong and not finding it in first aid under that bug's description.
UWorld/QBank are great at pointing out the high yield bugs, typical presentations, and associated high yield facts from each. Know those and I think you'll be pretty good on micro. I don't know the Microcards mentioned, but I found the one I bought annoying and overtly detailed. I also personally don't learn well through notecards (more of a table guy myself). So, that could make a difference. |
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#42 | |
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2K Member
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(these are the Sanjiv Microcards btw: http://www.shopping.com/Book_Microca...ar_Nissim/info) I'm posting a link to the second, not third, edition here. I know the third edition just came out, but I can't comment on them, because I've only used the second. However the second edition was phenomenal. |
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#43 |
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Junior Member
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Quick question guys. Do we need to know anything about the RNA viruses beyond what's in FA? For example St. Louis or California encephalitis? Or dengue? Not expanded upon and not touched in UW - I'm just wondering how much we would need to know besides the name association with the virus/class...
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#44 |
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Senior Member
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I believe I've seen dengue in the context of a "break-bone" fever, either on COMLEX or USMLE. All in all, these are low-yield, but if you're going for a high score and want to have all your bases covered, know the basics about them. The encephalitic viruses are difficult to differentiate clinically, so knowing the viral structure and how a viral encephalitis presents in general should be good enough. The viruses with unique characteristic symptoms, such as dengue and yellow virus, and unique endemic areas are probably worth your time.
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#45 |
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Senior Member
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here's my, please don't throw eggs, I just got tired and it seems that can't think of anything at all..
vaccines that contain only capsule polysaccharide (not conjugated with toxoid or whatever protein component), they elicit only humoral immunity, right? but how polysaccharide, being logically not a protein, elicits immune response? what are the effector cells of this response? thanks! |
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#46 |
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Senior Member
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anyone?
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#47 |
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Senior Member
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So how does CMMRS compare to microcards. I plan on doing GT + one of the 2 previously stated. Which one would be better?
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#48 | |
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Senior Member
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#49 | |
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Senior Member
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thank you! |
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but so far, having done maaaany notes on micro section in FA, I like it 




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