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I'm a first year med student who did poorly on the first gross anatomy exam of the year, and we have another exam coming soon - its on the abdomen and pelvis. I've studied the relevant body parts listed in Netter (the textbook). So, if you showed me an unlabeled picture of an opened abdomen and pelvis, I could name every significant organ, nerve, artery, etc.
However, the multiple choice tests we get don't just ask us to identify body parts - rather, they test us about the relationships between these body parts. For instance, instead of just asking us to identify the transverse colon, we are asked what body part suspends it, what system of nerves innervate it, what branch of arteries supply it, what level of the spine it's at, how it relates to the peritoneum, etc.
These type of questions hurt my score a lot on the last test, and I've found that simply studying the pictures in Netter is not enough to be able to effectively answer these questions. We have another textbook, Moore, but the volume of information in it is so overwhelming (countless pages of dense text for each region of the body), that I've struggled to make effective use of it. In any event, is there any technique or resource that you guys have used to learn these anatomical relations reasonably efficiently? 😕
However, the multiple choice tests we get don't just ask us to identify body parts - rather, they test us about the relationships between these body parts. For instance, instead of just asking us to identify the transverse colon, we are asked what body part suspends it, what system of nerves innervate it, what branch of arteries supply it, what level of the spine it's at, how it relates to the peritoneum, etc.
These type of questions hurt my score a lot on the last test, and I've found that simply studying the pictures in Netter is not enough to be able to effectively answer these questions. We have another textbook, Moore, but the volume of information in it is so overwhelming (countless pages of dense text for each region of the body), that I've struggled to make effective use of it. In any event, is there any technique or resource that you guys have used to learn these anatomical relations reasonably efficiently? 😕