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If you were picking just one source to review all of pathology after 2nd year in lets say 4-5 days, do you think Pathoma + First Aid + questions would be more than enough? That way I don't really have to read through BRS Path or Goljan Path.
If you were picking just one source to review all of pathology after 2nd year in lets say 4-5 days, do you think Pathoma + First Aid + questions would be more than enough? That way I don't really have to read through BRS Path or Goljan Path.
There's very little pathology on Step 1 that isn't covered in Pathoma (if you include the corresponding videos and not just the booklet). It basically has everything that First Aid has + missing holes. And, it's explained rather than just written on a page.
Definitely a good thing to plow through the last two weeks in your study time if you think you digest things well by just listening. I'm 1.5 weeks away and have been re-doing Pathoma + re-reading First Aid + UWorld random blocks + memorizing specific First Aid pages I'm weak on.
There are a lot of diseases not covered on pathoma that are highly likely to appear on STEP 1. He's pathology but he's not everything. Metabolic diseases, genetic diseases, infectious diseases and nervous system diseases are four huge gaping holes that you will have to review from elsewhere. His CNS section is a joke.
That said, I love his videos and I think it's the best $100 I spent in terms of STEP 1 preparation. I'd pay another $100 if he'd make videos for everything he hasn't covered yet.
I always thought of Pathoma as covering Pathology only. You would use another resource for Year 1 stuff, and for Pathophys/Pharm, wouldn't you?
I don't see your point. Metabolic diseases are part of pathology. Genetic diseases are part of pathology. Nervous system diseases are part of pathology. Infectious diseases are part of pathology. Take a look at Robbins or Rapid Review Pathology and you'll find those topics in there. Pathology isn't defined as "stuff you tend to do second year." I really appreciate Pathoma but I do think it could be improved greatly by including 6-8 more hours on those topics.
but thats why it is essential that you include kaplan path and uworld when studying pathoma. these 2 fill in the missing gaps of pathoma.
It depends, Are you an average student in your class, or are you top performer. From my experience I would recommend RR pathology with you ms1 and ms2 lectures, and the switch to pathoma when doing dedicated study for step1. If your pathology and pathophysio logy is not top performer you should not waste time on pathoma, even though it has good information. If you are top performer in your class, the stick to pathoma because it will in the gaps.
I disagree. I didn't learn any path throughout the year. Pathoma + FA was more than enough for almost all the qbanks.
There are a lot of diseases not covered on pathoma that are highly likely to appear on STEP 1. He's pathology but he's not everything. Metabolic diseases, genetic diseases, infectious diseases and nervous system diseases are four huge gaping holes that you will have to review from elsewhere. His CNS section is a joke.
That said, I love his videos and I think it's the best $100 I spent in terms of STEP 1 preparation. I'd pay another $100 if he'd make videos for everything he hasn't covered yet.
If he wanted to make more money he wouldn't let you watch the videos 8 times. Someone on here said he was going to make the videos for Kaplan but sells them himself because of how much Kaplan was going to charge people for the videos.Probably left those out so there could be huge improvements in the 2nd edition of the book. How else is he gonna run a business?
Or you can just do Rapid review pathology, instead of listening to boring lectures of Kaplan and plus average US medical student gets 5-6 weeks to prepare for step1. It honestly not worth listening to Kaplan pathology videos.
Like I mentioned before if you are an average medical student, then stick with your ms1 ans ms2 notes with RR pathology, and if you are top performer only then you should supplement with pathoma. I am not saying pathoma is not good for step1, all I am trying to point out is that use pathoma as FA for pathology.
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I'm nearing the end of my first pass of First Aid (and will go over it again in the last few weeks before the test) and I'm also doing Pathoma a bit at night. After studying the same topic in both First Aid and Pathoma, I feel my First Aid learning is 10x than my Pathoma's. Pathoma almost seems too basic at times and spends too much time explaining obvious things. Even on 1.7x, half of the time I'm twiddling my thumbs because First Aid already taught me it and in more detail than Pathoma. I've done the first 3 sections so far and I'm trying to force myself to do it all of it, but my motivation is lessening since it just feels like a less in-depth First Aid review.
Like I said, I think I'm going to finish Pathoma, but First Aid on its own may be more useful than FirstAid+Pathoma since FA is more detailed and comprehensive. The extra time not doing Pathoma may be better spent reviewing FA again.
Anyone else have a similar experience?
The first 3 chapters are 1. Growth Adaptations, Cellular Injury and Cell Death 2. Inflammation, Inflammatory Disorders and Wound Healing 3. Principles of Neoplasia.
Do you REALLY expect something else than "basic" stuff out of those chapters? Go and listen to some system lectures and give us a second opinion on Pathoma, which is actually pretty damn good - just not enough. But saying that FA is more "in depth" is almost blasphemy.
There are a lot of diseases not covered on pathoma that are highly likely to appear on STEP 1. He's pathology but he's not everything. Metabolic diseases, genetic diseases, infectious diseases and nervous system diseases are four huge gaping holes that you will have to review from elsewhere. His CNS section is a joke.
That said, I love his videos and I think it's the best $100 I spent in terms of STEP 1 preparation. I'd pay another $100 if he'd make videos for everything he hasn't covered yet.
24thGrade, I agree with you that the CNS section really needs to be supplemented with RR.
Well not entire CNS, just the tumors etc. No?
Comparing the CNS section to my pathology class CNS block, I agree that the tumors is really the only part that is lacking. And maybe a couple of demyelinating diseases were lacking in pathoma, but maybe those are not as high yield
I mean obviously the chapter is titled CNS, but there's zero on the peripheral nervous system. Guillain-Barre, trigeminal neuralgia, fibromyalgia, diabetic neuropathy, entrapment syndromes, radiculopathies, spinal cord tumors, etc. aren't even mentioned in passing.Comparing the CNS section to my pathology class CNS block, I agree that the tumors is really the only part that is lacking. And maybe a couple of demyelinating diseases were lacking in pathoma, but maybe those are not as high yield
Goljan, in my opinion, has WAY too much detail for Step 1. I get overwhelmed and lost in the detail and thus don't prefer to use it for exam review (and especially not in your 4-5 day time frame).
Pathoma + FA + Qbanks (ALL three) will cover all bases, I feel. No more, no less.
quick question
first aid says celiac dis primarily affects jejunum
pathoma says primarily duodenum
any ideas?
quick question
first aid says celiac dis primarily affects jejunum
pathoma says primarily duodenum
any ideas?
Pathoma p110: Crohn's disease associations include ankylosing spondylitis and uveitis. FA 2012 (p355) lists these under ulcerative colitis. 😕
If you were picking just one source to review all of pathology after 2nd year in lets say 4-5 days, do you think Pathoma + First Aid + questions would be more than enough? That way I don't really have to read through BRS Path or Goljan Path.
Does anyone know a site/ have a link to download the PDF version of pathoma?
Im planning on buying it eventually, but wanted to wait until I was in second year to but it so that the 12 month online stuff doesnt expire.....
IBD (so chron's and UC) is associated with HLA-B27, as are ankylosing spondylitis and uveitis.
So... both are correct?
I think so. I looked into rapid review and into robins but no clear answer. So I am assuming its both.
Throughout MS1, i always thought Goljan RR is the gold standard for pathology, but SDN is really making a case for Pathoma. So as a rising MS2, i was planning on getting Pathoma (12 month subsription) and using the reserve copy in the library of Goljan RR to annotate the missing information into the Pathoma book through 2nd year courses. I'm also going to review First Aid and Gunner Training along the way and when the time comes, Qbank.
What do you guys think? Good plan, insufficient, or overkill?😕😕
Does pathoma cover all the details in first AID... Point being to avoid redundancy, did you annotate much of FA into pathoma?
Additionally i think RR personally is dense for its all inclusiveness of micro (including life cycles, pharm, etc...), physio, and biochem which is great but wouldnt a more rational approach be simply writing in your path margin see this bug or pathway on page # of FA or of BRS phys...At least in that way i mean you'ere gonna wind up covering FA and all its biochem and micro ajnd pharm anyways but for the purpose of a "rapid review goljanLike" approach wouldnt a simple refer to this page in your annotated pathoma be the trick or am i missing something about the power of Goljan that these mere references dont capture
Does pathoma cover all the details in first AID... Point being to avoid redundancy, did you annotate much of FA into pathoma?
Additionally i think RR personally is dense for its all inclusiveness of micro (including life cycles, pharm, etc...), physio, and biochem which is great but wouldnt a more rational approach be simply writing in your path margin see this bug or pathway on page # of FA or of BRS phys...At least in that way i mean you'ere gonna wind up covering FA and all its biochem and micro ajnd pharm anyways but for the purpose of a "rapid review goljanLike" approach wouldnt a simple refer to this page in your annotated pathoma be the trick or am i missing something about the power of Goljan that these mere references dont capture