Neuroanatomy

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DrMarioNES

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Just wanted to know if anyone had any suggestions for a good neuroanatomy textbook. We are currently using Neuroanatomy through Clinical Cases but I don't care much for it. Any other suggestions?

Thanks.

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:eek: :eek: You already have the bestest book ever :eek: :eek: Blumenfeld is the man! I honestly loved every part of that book.
 
High Yield Neuroanatomy more then you'll ever need.
 
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Thank you all for your suggestions.
 
There's a book by Eric Kandel (Nobel Prize winner) called "Principles of Neuroscience." Its 1000+ ppgs & 55 chapters long, but I love it. The only drawback may be that its not clinically oriented.
 
Sicilian said:
There's a book by Eric Kandel (Nobel Prize winner) called "Principles of Neuroscience." Its 1000+ ppgs & 55 chapters long, but I love it. The only drawback may be that its not clinically oriented.


This is a great book. very detailed.

High-yield Neuroanatomy is the way to go. Don't ever ever get rid of this book. Keep it in your library forever.

There was a site from one particular med school that had a very outstanding downloadable color atlas with all sort of color schemes for the tracts and different areas of the brain and wonderful diagrams. Ironically, I through the damn thing out 2 days ago during cleaning. Since I am going into Neurology/IM, I pretty much had memorized the thing and didn't find any use for it anymore.
 
Try Kingsley's 'Concise Text of Neuroscience'. I've been reading that, and it's great - detailed enough for the class, but small enough not to keep you up all night.

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