Official 2008 Usmle Step 1 Experiences and Scores Thread

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lion

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Greetings my brothers and sisters ,

I am new member here and will be taking my boards in another few months .
I thought I would start a thread devoted to a compilation of 2008 usmle experiences . I don't have anything to report as yet since my test is in a few month but anyone who has taken the test in 2008 please share with us your experience and feedback so we can keep the SDN tradition alive !

Good Luck :luck:

"Never , never , never , never Give up ! "
 
Havent been out to ride any waves yet but hurricane is right around the corner for those of us in south Fla. so there is hope. However, spending some time on a beautiful boat on the open water can be very rewarding.....love that (sun) light at the end of the tunnel.
 
First a little background about myself, I'm a little atypical. I went to grad school(masters) before medical school and covered a chunk of the medical school information and actually remembered most of it. I then went to a medical school with no tests/quizzes and no grades. So this allowed me to do A LOT of practice questions throughout 2nd year because I didn't have other tests to worry about.

I also wanted to say thanks for everyone that posted in the past. This was a great resource and that's why I took the time to try to remember as many details as possible, give the best advice I can and post my scores. I hope people find this as helpful as I found some of the information on here.

My test: It was about what I expected. There were like 5% that I would have never known. I thought 70-80% were covered well by the question banks and study resources that everyone uses. On the other questions, I was able to make a good educated guess based on the information given. Some of these questions just went a step further mechanism-wise than I knew. I really thought that my test was well balanced in all the subjects. Nothing stood out as being really overly represented. I did think that many of the 5% of questions that I thought were the toughest were molecular biology based. Can't really remember Biochem but I think I had a few straight forward questions. A lot of the path was the straight forward questions that are expected (ie Parkinsons cross section of midbrain, horseshoe kidney, etc). Some of the path wanted one more step than I knew, but I knew enough to get a good guess on these. My micro was very straight forward had a bunch of basic bacteria questions, maybe 3-5 virus questions and 3-5 parasite (1 Giardia, 2 malaria I think). Micro was astronomically easier than QBank. I had fair amount of pharm questions, many were straight forward but there were also a handful of pharmacokinetics and some questions on new drugs (ie. the new Alzheimer drugs and I had an Orlistat question). Had a handful of "what would you say questions" for behavioral science, a few psych questions and a bunch of interpreting study design and data(Rel Risk, Odds Ratios, spec and sensitivity, etc). From what I can remember a bunch of my physiology questions were experiment based, but nothing too hard. My anatomy was about 50% limbs and 50% everything else. I had maybe 5 embryology questions nothing too hard though(horseshoe kidney, merkels diverticulum, etc.). I had a fair amount of neuroscience but nothing too ridiculous, my toughest questions in this were the ones where they wanted me to interpret cerebral angiograms(I think I had three of these). I don't remember any specific Immuno questions but I'm sure I had some. I'm probably forgetting a lot, but I agree with the people that say no matter what you don't come out of this exam feeling good because everyone gets a bunch of hard questions that they can't forget after leaving.

Resources I used and liked or didnt like:
Anatomy- USMLE Roadmap Gross Anatomy- awesome book, you could probably just read all the clinical correlates in italics and get most or all of the anatomy questions that I got. Kaplan lectures were so-so
Embryo- HY Embryo 2nd edition really liked it gave me everything I needed and more and was a short easy read.
Neuro- Combination of Roadmap Neuroscience and Kaplan lectures and you will know neuro. Best Kaplan lectures in the bunch(and only like 9hrs).
Immuno: just relied on my grad school work, Kaplan lectures are short and quick overview. Don't have a good recommendation here.
Molecular Biology/Biochem- Really like the Kaplan notes and have heard that RR is really good too(didnt use it myself). HY Molecular Bio (1999) is short and sweet and covers the basics.
Micro- MMRS and microcards(LWW), cover most everything you need to know I think. Didn't think Kaplan notes were very good.
Pharm- I used Lippincott's and PharmCards(LWW). Never really found a resource that I really liked for this. I heard a few weeks ago that Roadmap Pharm was really good, but too late for me. Kaplan lectures were okay(very good for autonomics), some drug groups better than others.
Physio: Didn't really use anything this year, but I really liked Constanzo(big book and BRS) and Kaplan lectures/notes (second best behind neuro) during first year.
Path: Obviously we all know that Goljan's STARS textbook is awesome for use during 2nd year. I really liked RR path. Robbins Atlas helped with visualizing a lot of it. I think BRS is shorter and easier to get through and if I had to go through it quickly in a few days probably would have used BRS.
Behavioral- HY Behavioral (2nd edition). I liked this book was pretty short, an easy read, and gave enough detail. Behavioral lectures from Kaplan are good too, but kind of long.
Other: Spent my last week going through First Aid and I thought this was a good way to get a review of everything right before the test. I also got through a few sections of First Aid Cases which I really wish that I had devoted more time too at the end, I think it's a really good book/format and would have liked to have gotten through it. And, I hate saying this because these people screw med students out of $$$ by publishing First Aid every year.

Question Banks(I think ranked in order of quality, although they are all good and will all get you ready):
1. UWorld-(Completed with an 81% Avg) most like the real exam with questions that really make you do multiple steps and make you think. Would recommend doing for the last month before the test. Same exact software as the real test.
2a. USMLEConsult(123)- (completed 76% Avg) thought that these questions were like many of the ones on the test but don't test you as much on the more difficult questions on the test. I thought they had really good explanations and references. I used these early in 2nd year as supplement to class. They have almost the same software as the test.
2b. Kaplan-(did like 85% and got a 77% Avg) I did this in between finishing consult and starting world. I thought this overall was pretty good as well. Good at packing a lot of details into your head, but I thought especially the micro was way overboard. Maybe a little too detail oriented and try to trick you more than the real test does.

Test Date Score
CBME 12/20/07: 250
NBME3 2/28/08: 247
NBME5 4/27/08: 264
NBME6 5/4/08: 261
NBME 4 5/11/08: 263
Real Thing 5/14/08: 264 👍
Last day of class 2nd year 5/23/08 😎

Got the score back exactly 3 weeks after the exam (6/4/08)

Hope this helps! Good Luck Everyone :luck:
 
maybe off topic, but you guys seem to the best source for info on the forums...anybody getting accurate score predictions from the kaplan q-bank estimator? mine seems to be a bit high at this point. maybe i'm being underconfident (haven't taken my two NBME's yet) or maybe the questions are actually tough and i'm doing alright. any thoughts/experiences would be sweet. i'll let y'all know my strategy after the 14th i've seen how it goes.

I'm probably not the best authority on this but here are my results:

my goal was a 235+

I used BRS review books during the year and in the 1st 3 wks of my studying post class in april (annotated FA and Kap. Medessent) then moved to using primarily just FA/Kap Med Essentials for the last month. I started using kaplan q-bank in the middle of march and in the beginning avg. around 58 or so, my overall avg ended up being around 67 with the last 2 wks avg around 75-80%. I think my predicted score was 237. I thought that was high based on NBME and how I thought I compared to others I was studying with. I took the NBME # 3 exam about 2 and half weeks before the real thing and got a 510 (est. 221).

After taking that NBME i went through FA and kaplan medessentials one more time and I felt like I starting really putting things together finally and my qbank scores went up, but I was too nervous after getting through my review again to take an NBME bec. though I felt like I had learned a lot in the prior wks since the first NBME i thought if I did poorly it would take any confidence i had away.

Took the test May 15, got the results back today 6/4 Score = 247

I'm very happy.
My feeling is that the score est. will under/overest. depending on how you utilize the questions and how your scores change. For ex. if you take 2 people with a 65% overall on qbank.
Person #1 started with 63% and 2nd half got 67% to avg to a 65%
Person #2 started with 55% and 2nd half got 75% to avg to a 65%

I think it is likely that #2 may end up doing better although score est. will give both persons the same prediction.

I also recommend not taking a practice NBME within your last week. I think it will either make you overconfident or nervous dep. on your score and what you are shooting for and I dont think there is much you can do about it at that point. Just review fine details that you tend to forget a lot in the last week any concepts you tend to struggle with and relax the day before the test

Good luck to everyone who hasnt taken the test yet
 
Waiting for scores is a lot worse than I thought it would be. :laugh:

I need to get away from things from a while, clear my mind and think about something else.

I'm gone (SDN block?) for the next couple of weeks, so if you send me a PM please don't be offended if I don't reply in a timely fashion.
 
I then went to a medical school with no tests/quizzes and no grades.

Real Thing 5/14/08: 264 👍

LOL, I should send this to the profs/administration at Vandy; it seems like they get paid per test.

Great job, also thanks for taking the time to type that up!
 
did anyone walk out of the test feeling like they had been hit by a truck, then find out they did okay????


just wondering.
 
I am an IMG. Well here are my scores-

UW - I dont exactly remember but around 75% cumulative, with last 10 tests in 80-84% range. I did only 24 or so tests (that is 1200 qs, all mixed untimed). The actual exam is easier than UW.

7 weeks prior - NBME 1 - 680/253

I took UW self assessment like 3-4 weeks prior- Got 252 or around (cant remember)

2 weeks prior - NBME 4 - 640/247 (disappointed that my score actually came down.....but maybe becoz i took it at the end of a long day of studying)

Actual test 257 🙂

MY MISTAKES DURING PREP-

I didn't stick to my original schedule. I was initially supposed to take it in march end.....but then I figured out i wasnt prepared enough and cancelled it. I hadnt revised my stuff. I should have taken the 21st march NBME earlier to know where i stood, and studied harder in last days to get a quick revision.

Instead I had to reapply...took it on may 14th....that period in between was pure torture.

So I would advise to make a simple doable schedule and stick to it no matter what.

THE GOOD PART ABT MY PREP-
1) I concentrated on understanding mechanisms and reasoning, and that was most of the exam. Kaplan for everthing except Path (that i did from Goljan RR). And yes, I dont know what I would have done without FA in last few days while revising. Had added my notes to it. Gem of a book for step 1!

2)Had good sound sleep for 6 hours, night before exam. That does help in a 7 blocks exam.

I would say i was a tad disappointed that i didnt break 260 despite getting a 253 on one of the NBMEs 7 weeks prior. Also my exam went much better than any of my NBMEs. I guess the postponement was too much and I sort of burned out too early. But with all the unpredictability of these tests, I am very very happy with my score🙂

Best of luck to test takers.
 
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people who took the test after may 15th, can anyone confirm that we will only receive our scores mid-july? is this a worst-case scenario or a set date?

thanks,
k
 
did anyone walk out of the test feeling like they had been hit by a truck, then find out they did okay????


just wondering.

Yes, everyone feels like that because you forget all the easy questions that you flew through and remember the ridiculous ones that made you say "I cant believe I got asked THAT!"

Just try to relax and unwind for a few weeks and be happy that its all over 😀
 
Well, here goes nothing. I sat for Step ONE of the United States Medical Licensing Examination today. I agree with the feeling about being run over by a truck, not so much for the test content, but more the length. This is definitely a marathon and not a sprint.

First, my previous scores:

Kaplan Qbank - 64% with 92% completed (maybe not so accurate since I did some of these during the year with my systems courses)

USMLEWorld Qbank - 60% with 100% completed (I did every block random and in tutor mode since timing is never and issue for me).

NBME 4 (2 weeks before) = 219 (500)

USMLEWorld Self Assessment (1 week before) = 236* (I do think since I worked through the their Qbank, my score was higher on this than it should have been)

Materials used for studying: USMLEWorld Qbank, First Aid, Kaplan Lecture Notes on Pathology, Biochemistry, and Physiology (free from our school). I had originally planned on studying for four weeks, but at the beginning of my study time, my mom passed away... so 3 weeks it was (and I still felt like I wanted to move up the test to get it over with).

Realistic Goal = 220
Ecstatic Goal = 230

General:
The testing facility had technical difficulties getting people signed in when I arrived at 7:30AM, after working out all the issues, I finally got back to the computer around 8:20AM (some advice would be to get there ahead of everyone else who is taking Step 1, even at 7:30, I was the last Step One person there!). Not much else to comment about, our facility had nice highback leather office chairs to take the test in, they also provided some gun muff style ear phones, which at times felt like I was listening to the ocean (maybe they had a hole in them!). I motored through 2 blocks, took a 5 minute break, motored through 3 more blocks, took a 20 minute lunch, and finished off the last 2 blocks to be done around 1:45ish.

Behavioral:
Lots of quote type questions with a few personality disorders and a smidge of eating disorders. More than I expected, but that is a good thing, as it is one of my better areas.

Biochemistry:
I don't really know how to address this area. In preparing, this has always been one of my weaker points (not a strong point in D.O. curriculum). There were a good amount of biochemistry questions, most of them I was not sure of the correct answer. Not a whole lot of name the enzyme from A to B. More disease correlated. OH, and I also had a question about delta G in an equilibrium reaction (I had to flashback to undergrad physics for this!).

Anatomy:
Pretty straight forward normal limb stuff. One really weird question about retrograde pancreaticocholeyadayadayadagraphy that must have required you to have a little bit of surgical knowledge.

Microbiology:
A good mix of bacteria and viruses (no weird virology positive sense/negative sense crap, mostly just straight ID) with some scabies just for fun. No other parasites I don't think.

Pathology:
This has always been my strongest area, so I didn't find any of the path questions to be that hard.

Pharmacology:
I pretty much got mugged on HIV therapy. It was one of those things that I just glossed over while studying and they hit me with 4-5 questions on MOA etc. Lots of your typical SNS type Drug X gets added to Drug Y type stuff.

Physiology:
This was another one of my weaker subjects (this and biochem are weaker probably because I have slept many more nights since having these things in first year). Lots of arrows. A tip: always start from the left arrows and work your way over. The test is designed so you can eliminate half your answer choices based on the first arrow. Whereas, if you start on the right everything gets jumbled up easier.

Embryology:
Typical neural tube defects. Nothing to hard.

AV Question:
I had this at the end of a block just like everyone else had. Kind of weird. I didn't even hear a murmur, but luckily that was an answer choice!

Parting words:
Man, I am glad that is over. I will be back on or around the 16th of July to post my results. Lucky me, since I am an osteopathic student I get to saddle up again on Monday for the COMLEX, but I am thinking I am not too worried about it. 🙂
 
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NBME 4 (2 weeks before) = 219 (500)

Realistic Goal = 220
Ecstatic Goal = 230

Thanks for the post (esp all the info). For some reason

USMLEWorld Self Assessment (1 week before) = 236

I have a feeling you'll be happy with your score 🙂

Also, FWIW

did anyone walk out of the test feeling like they had been hit by a truck, then find out they did okay????

A friend/mentor said this last year. They got a 272...
 
sooo im takin my exam in a few days...i was feelin pretty confident after i took U World assessment last week...and then the last few days...my Kaplan q-bank scores went up really high and the last 3 or 4 exams it went down...whyyy? thas not a good sign...did anyone ever feel like they were forgetting shiet a few days before their exam?
 
sooo im takin my exam in a few days...i was feelin pretty confident after i took U World assessment last week...and then the last few days...my Kaplan q-bank scores went up really high and the last 3 or 4 exams it went down...whyyy? thas not a good sign...did anyone ever feel like they were forgetting shiet a few days before their exam?

Yes. That's why I'm going to go through FA today, tomorrow, and Sunday and then high yield (for me) sections Monday and Tuesday before the beast on Wednesday. Yay for short term memory (without it, I'd have failed out of med school well before this point).
 
did anyone walk out of the test feeling like they had been hit by a truck, then find out they did okay????


just wondering.
I wouldn't say that I felt like I had been hit by a truck, but I definitely didn't feel like I did as well as my last NBME and I ended up with a score that was only 1pt lower, which was still more than I could have ever expected.
 
Just wanted to give another story since I know leading up to my test I could never get enough perspectives. I was no all-star in college and probable lived the frat life more than the serious student life, but that’s what college was for and now that I have no life I am glad I did.

I started studying (or should I say getting paranoid) the summer after first year. Read up a lot on SDN although I never posted. The big thing was trying to develop a plan for studying. So many books meant way to many options! After a lot of reading the post I asked some of the residents in my home program what they used. After weighing a lot of worthless (now they are but at the time stressful) options, I came down with a list.

After looking at my list I know it was going to be pricey! Luckily for me I had for the past two years been involved in a specialty I wanted to make a career (hopefully..) and one of there soon to be residents gave me all of her books from Step 1! Saved me like $600. I owe her a lot!

-Kaplan Book set 06-07. She had taken the course and had filled very elegant and detailed notes which made my life great! I used them as my basic background for every subject. They were easy reads overall and gave most of the basics and needed info on all topics.

- BSS books (three systems, the ones you need) Oldies but goodies. I got the idea to use these books from my years on SDN prior to going to Med school. People loved them. So I figured if Goljan wrote them they couldn’t be bad. They in no way represent the format of the test but they are hard! Very detailed and will make you question everything. But in the end the really help with Physio and Path, two subjects I wanted to have down flat. This is the best resource for all those “arrows and graphs” types of questions, they are hard but worth it. Don’t let the difficulty get you down. Plus there are some nice little gems for details you won’t find many other places. They did that for me, I did good in both path and physio. It has over 2,200 question and doing them in six-seven days really helped build stamina, but it was brutal.

-First Aid 2008 I added some notes but not like the many people who carry it all year and add Everything under the sun in the margins. For me I know doing that would make it too cluttered. I wrote some good acronyms and some detail points I wanted to remember buts that’s it.
-First Aid 2005 read through it and added some notes my predecessor used that I thought were good for me.
-BRS Neuro didn’t touch it! Worthless! Went to B&N and read HY Neuro, all you need, just the spine and brainstem and some arm/leg nerves and your good. Really I went to far in my quest to master this.
-Langman’s Embyrology Again I did too much, I really had no Q’s on this topic, and lucky I guess.
-BRS Micro and Immuno 4th ed. Good quick read but I got a hold of a MMMRS and read it through before I started studying hardcore.
-Anatomy Recall good for a quick review when I had some down time. I also scanned the Road Maps for the arm and leg sections.
-BRS Physio 4th ed good book and read over my weak subjects but the BSS series are better, they may be older but Physio doesn’t change much.
- HY Biochem- Good read on top of Kaplan, and easy.
- Lippman Biochem read during the winter break before the 2nd half of my 2nd year. Just powered through it in 4 days. I felt like it was worthless doing it this early but I can’t rule it out since Biochem on the test was a breeze
-BRS Path 3rd ed. Never touched it.

RR Goljan Read it all and since I had listen to the audio it was not too new. Dense book but read it through, maybe too fast but the Margins in your last days a gold.

RR Goljain Audio Like many here I start in November listening to him at the gym, in the car, etc… Got through it three times but that was a little overkill, especially with his books.

I have copy of a 42 day study schedule that I created after a month of pondering, if you want it PM me so I don’t take up any more space here.

I did 48% of the questions on Qbank even while people said to do them all twice! I was never one who learned that well from questions so I just chose to read instead, so it can be done. I guess after reading here I should have done UW but now it's pointless. Qbank ain't bad and if you know your stuff before the test it don't matter if you saw the question before or one like it. But if you count the BSS books I defiantly did my share of Q's.

I took only NBME 6# and got a 238. On the test I got 247, hard work pays off, even if in the midst of it you don’t feel like it will. I felt many times that I was simple forgetting the info I had read, but I think a lot of your knowledge becomes unconscious and you just have to trust your plan.

Thanks to all those before me that posted and helped my calm many of my fears, although some post only sparked new ones but it all ended ok so oh well. Also I didn’t check this over so forgive spelling/grammer.
 

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people who took the test after may 15th, can anyone confirm that we will only receive our scores mid-july? is this a worst-case scenario or a set date?

thanks,
k

can't confirm anything, but the students at my school that took the test through may 15th already received their scores. i took my test the 16th and i didn't get it back yet. i am assuming it will come on tues night. this is assuming one didn't get the audiovisual questions.
 
I took it yesterday and just wanted to say that USMLE World is by far the most accurate predictor of the types of questions you will see on this thing. The NBMEs are worth doing i guess but don't do them too close to the time of the exam. Either way, DO NOT EXPECT TO LEAVE THE TEST FEELING LIKE YOU DID WELL. My average on World was in the mid 60s and I got in the 230s on the last NBME I did but the day of you get all these questions that you're just like "what the f". The key here is to stick to your strategy. The closer to the test you get the more it becomes a test of strategy and how you approach the questions than what you know. By that time you know what you know. You need to start taking a look at questions you got wrong and ask yourself "WHY WHY WHY MECHANISM WHY" but instead of mechanism more like "why did i get this wrong". Try and fix your bad habits. Goljan is king. I listened to his audio probably 3-4 times. Gold. Pure Gold.

Anyway the day of the test get there early. I got there before 7 and was taking the test by like 645. USE YOUR BREAKS. Throw your ipod on and just try and zone out. You need to get your mind off of what's going on for those few minutes of freedom. I felt like I had 4 sections that were a little easier than World, 2 sections that were comparable in difficulty and one that was absolutely miserable (the 7th one for me...i marked at least half of them). So that didn't do much to make me feel good after leaving the test but f it, its over. Hollerlujah. Good luck y'all
 
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before i begin, i'm not one of those people that says "i bombed it" and end up getting a 99%. if i say i bombed it, that means i bombed it. i know a lot of the SDNers here are worryworts and exaggerate how they feel. anyway, here goes--
i read through first aid once starting in february, except for biochemistry and micro. when shelf exams ended in early may, i had about 4 weeks to study for step 1. but in actuality, i studied for step 1 in about 2 full, hardcore weeks. i read through FA about 5 times. i knew it cold. i had both kaplan qbank and UW, but after taking the path & pharm shelf exams in may, i chose to ditch kaplan qbank because it was unlike the shelf exams. the people who write the shelf exams are the same writers for the USMLE.

i took the step 1 this past saturday... or 3 days ago. in general, the exam was a lot different that UW and the NBMEs. the questions were more general, with some questions being very specific. some questions asked for one step more than what was listed in FA. despite studying proportionately to the official breakdown of the exam, i got A LOT of anatomy, biochemistry, and embryology. and no, this isn't recall bias either. i can remember word for word almost 150 questions of the exam; yes, i have very good short term memory.

pharm- about half were those 'you know it or you don;t' type questions that asked about indications. i got about 3 Qs on interpreting drug concentrations and graphs. i unfortunately had two questions that required you to know the half-life equaiton and another on how to calculate the maintenance dose. seems like i'm the only one out of my friends to get these calculations.

path- majority of these questions were easy for me. very long clinical stems, but honestly, read the question and answer choices first. then read the random unrelated clinical stems. some Qs were very general. others were very specific. i got very few mechanism questions. they were more toward physiology-based.

biochem-some were really easy. you just had to recognize that this enzyme came from what pathway. for example, there was this question on mucopolysaccharies and it said that if a new gene therapy design was invented, where would the therapy target? answer is lysosomes. some were hard though.

embryo- i got a question on those branch pouches, which i did not memorize, since none of my friends who took the step 1 before me got a question like that. embryo questions were hard.

behavioral sciences- i got almost 15 out of 48 Qs just on the first block on ethics. most of them were like what would you tell the patient if this and that happened. honestly, i rather have these questions than any other question, because i could narrow these down to two.

physiology- this was the majority of the exam. and every single possibility was there. questions were basically like patient has cushing syndrome. and then in the answer choices, there are Na+, Cl-, Mg+ and K+ -- all had either a down or up arrow. ALMOST EVERY single possibility was there, from A through I -- no joke! you had to know it. of course, i narrowed it down to two and it was a eenie meanie miney moe from that point on.

micro- i thought FA covered this well, but the step 1 used all these weird agars and tests that FA doesn't mention. i just answered these with what the most common pathogen would be found.

psychiatry- i got like 3 questions. pretty straight forward.

overall, i had 7 blocks of 48 questions. one media clip, which was a heart sound. i was unsure about 15-20 questions per block.

NBME 1: 184 (before memorizing stuff)
NBME 2: 206 (2 days before)
UW assessment: 192
UW: 70% complete; 47% untimed tutor

i don't know how u guys are getting 240s on those nbme's or getting 70% on those qbanks / UWs without redoing questions. i feel like my stats are more like where an average medical student is at. i may be wrong....
 
before i begin, i'm not one of those people that says "i bombed it" and end up getting a 99%. if i say i bombed it, that means i bombed it. i know a lot of the SDNers here are worryworts and exaggerate how they feel. anyway, here goes--
i read through first aid once starting in february, except for biochemistry and micro. when shelf exams ended in early may, i had about 4 weeks to study for step 1. but in actuality, i studied for step 1 in about 2 full, hardcore weeks. i read through FA about 5 times. i knew it cold. i had both kaplan qbank and UW, but after taking the path & pharm shelf exams in may, i chose to ditch kaplan qbank because it was unlike the shelf exams. the people who write the shelf exams are the same writers for the USMLE.

i took the step 1 this past saturday... or 3 days ago. in general, the exam was a lot different that UW and the NBMEs. the questions were more general, with some questions being very specific. some questions asked for one step more than what was listed in FA. despite studying proportionately to the official breakdown of the exam, i got A LOT of anatomy, biochemistry, and embryology. and no, this isn't recall bias either. i can remember word for word almost 150 questions of the exam; yes, i have very good short term memory.

pharm- about half were those 'you know it or you don;t' type questions that asked about indications. i got about 3 Qs on interpreting drug concentrations and graphs. i unfortunately had two questions that required you to know the half-life equaiton and another on how to calculate the maintenance dose. seems like i'm the only one out of my friends to get these calculations.

path- majority of these questions were easy for me. very long clinical stems, but honestly, read the question and answer choices first. then read the random unrelated clinical stems. some Qs were very general. others were very specific. i got very few mechanism questions. they were more toward physiology-based.

biochem-some were really easy. you just had to recognize that this enzyme came from what pathway. for example, there was this question on mucopolysaccharies and it said that if a new gene therapy design was invented, where would the therapy target? answer is lysosomes. some were hard though.

embryo- i got a question on those branch pouches, which i did not memorize, since none of my friends who took the step 1 before me got a question like that. embryo questions were hard.

behavioral sciences- i got almost 15 out of 48 Qs just on the first block on ethics. most of them were like what would you tell the patient if this and that happened. honestly, i rather have these questions than any other question, because i could narrow these down to two.

physiology- this was the majority of the exam. and every single possibility was there. questions were basically like patient has cushing syndrome. and then in the answer choices, there are Na+, Cl-, Mg+ and K+ -- all had either a down or up arrow. ALMOST EVERY single possibility was there, from A through I -- no joke! you had to know it. of course, i narrowed it down to two and it was a eenie meanie miney moe from that point on.

micro- i thought FA covered this well, but the step 1 used all these weird agars and tests that FA doesn't mention. i just answered these with what the most common pathogen would be found.

psychiatry- i got like 3 questions. pretty straight forward.

overall, i had 7 blocks of 48 questions. one media clip, which was a heart sound. i was unsure about 15-20 questions per block.

NBME 1: 184 (before memorizing stuff)
NBME 2: 206 (2 days before)
UW assessment: 192
UW: 70% complete; 47% untimed tutor

i don't know how u guys are getting 240s on those nbme's or getting 70% on those qbanks / UWs without redoing questions. i feel like my stats are more like where an average medical student is at. i may be wrong....

This feels like one of the most honest reviews of what the test breakdown really looks like. Most people tend to completely underplay huge parts of their test. I mean everywhere you look people keep saying things like "oh embryo is a joke" or "micro is so simple on the real thing" etc. etc. First Aid might be good for maybe 60 percent of the test but the other 40, I feel, is all outside knowledge, qbanks and whatever else.

All these self-proclaimed superstars on SDN might lull you into a fall sense of security about the test and you might start slacking. I know there was a point after reading a few of these USMLE day experience posts, where I was actually telling myself that getting a 250+ on this thing is something everyone can do just by memorizing first aid and doing lots of qbank.

Anyway, thanks for taking the time to write out the review. It helped me get back on track.
 
This feels like one of the most honest reviews of what the test breakdown really looks like. Most people tend to completely underplay huge parts of their test. I mean everywhere you look people keep saying things like "oh embryo is a joke" or "micro is so simple on the real thing" etc. etc. First Aid might be good for maybe 60 percent of the test but the other 40, I feel, is all outside knowledge, qbanks and whatever else.

All these self-proclaimed superstars on SDN might lull you into a fall sense of security about the test and you might start slacking. I know there was a point after reading a few of these USMLE day experience posts, where I was actually telling myself that getting a 250+ on this thing is something everyone can do just by memorizing first aid and doing lots of qbank.

Anyway, thanks for taking the time to write out the review. It helped me get back on track.

I completely agree - it's really nice to hear some realism on this board - in all likelihood, I'll be lucky to have an average test score and reading these posts about 230-260 is really just cutting in to my confidence. Unfortunately, I can't stay away!!

Thanks, theunderdog. 🙂
 
Theunderdog

The others have said it and I agree, thank you for an honest, straight-forward review, it's much appreciated.
 
despite studying proportionately to the official breakdown of the exam, i got A LOT of anatomy, biochemistry, and embryology. and no, this isn't recall bias either. i can remember word for word almost 150 questions of the exam; yes, i have very good short term memory.

what kinds of anatomy questions did you have?
 
Probably like where stuff is. Particularly in relation to where, you know, other stuff is.

Just sayin. 😉
 
Probably like where stuff is. Particularly in relation to where, you know, other stuff is.

Just sayin. 😉

Not necessarily. I mean obviously that is somewhat necessary to answer the questions, but they could be clinical in nature (ex. winged scapula caused by long thoracic nerve injury to seratus ant., epidural hematoma caused my injury to med. meningeal artery under pterion, etc.) They don't have to be stuff like "which of the following muscles is not part of the rotator cuff?" Anyhow, thanks for the review underdog, I too am sick of whiny bitches on SDN complaining about "only" getting 230 on practice tests. When half of students score below 217, it's nothing to feel bad about getting an average score, and I will be ecstatic with a 230+. I hope to do at least average, and consider myself an average medical student.
 
what kinds of anatomy questions did you have?

the breakdown for the step 1 was NOT adhered to on my exam. i got a lot of anatomy, embryo, and biochem. no joke. and it's not recall bias. i relied on FA and my memory from 1st year anatomy to get through the section.

some were just straight anatomy questions that came from 1st year knowledge. for example, one that i got -- surgeon performed a mastectomy on a breast cancer patient. what nerve does he/she have to be especially careful in not cutting? i think this answer is in FA in one sentence in a side note in a margin, but other than that, you would have to know based on recall from your anatomy class. i put down long thoracic nerve. about half were like these type of questions.

the other half of anatomy questions were anatomy integrated into another subject. like they actually drew out a diagram of the optic chiasm and eyes for me. the question said that patient has a defect (blind spot) in the R lower quadrant of the R eye. what lobe of the brain is affected? i know it sounds more neurology, but for me, you got to know your lobes and the eye system to get this. i put parietal lobe. although i was debating between this and temporal lobe.

embryo for me was hard. i got a question that showed me a baby's Xray of the chest and abdomen. i swear, i could not see any intestines or stomach. question asked what embryological defect caused this?? i had no clue. i put malrotation of the stomach, but that is probably wrong. and very unfortunately for me, i did get ONE question on those branchial pouches and derivatives. i got about 4 embryo total on the exam, but that is more than what my friends got -- 6 of them got zero embryo questions and 1 got just one question.

and someone MSGed me about what kind of student i am. i am basically a hard working rising 3rd year at a US MD med school. i'm not a IMG. i went straight from college into med school. i'm just an average student in med school, but was a top student in college. i work hard and study hard. i'm not a very good standardized exam taker, just because i hate how everything is controlled and the time limits end up getting to me.

oh, and on UW, i started it during my studies, and was getting about 40-45% in the beginning. i have never redid Qs, because i always write down what i didn't know on UW in a notebook. i did my questions untimed and tutor mode, since time is not an issue for me on the exam. i ended up finishing 70% of the questions with a 47% average. i was getting 50-60% in the end.

fire away with questions! i still remember things pretty fresh.
 
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before i begin, i'm not one of those people that says "i bombed it" and end up getting a 99%. if i say i bombed it, that means i bombed it. i know a lot of the SDNers here are worryworts and exaggerate how they feel. anyway, here goes--
i read through first aid once starting in february, except for biochemistry and micro. when shelf exams ended in early may, i had about 4 weeks to study for step 1. but in actuality, i studied for step 1 in about 2 full, hardcore weeks. i read through FA about 5 times. i knew it cold. i had both kaplan qbank and UW, but after taking the path & pharm shelf exams in may, i chose to ditch kaplan qbank because it was unlike the shelf exams. the people who write the shelf exams are the same writers for the USMLE.

i took the step 1 this past saturday... or 3 days ago. in general, the exam was a lot different that UW and the NBMEs. the questions were more general, with some questions being very specific. some questions asked for one step more than what was listed in FA. despite studying proportionately to the official breakdown of the exam, i got A LOT of anatomy, biochemistry, and embryology. and no, this isn't recall bias either. i can remember word for word almost 150 questions of the exam; yes, i have very good short term memory.

pharm- about half were those 'you know it or you don;t' type questions that asked about indications. i got about 3 Qs on interpreting drug concentrations and graphs. i unfortunately had two questions that required you to know the half-life equaiton and another on how to calculate the maintenance dose. seems like i'm the only one out of my friends to get these calculations.

path- majority of these questions were easy for me. very long clinical stems, but honestly, read the question and answer choices first. then read the random unrelated clinical stems. some Qs were very general. others were very specific. i got very few mechanism questions. they were more toward physiology-based.

biochem-some were really easy. you just had to recognize that this enzyme came from what pathway. for example, there was this question on mucopolysaccharies and it said that if a new gene therapy design was invented, where would the therapy target? answer is lysosomes. some were hard though.

embryo- i got a question on those branch pouches, which i did not memorize, since none of my friends who took the step 1 before me got a question like that. embryo questions were hard.

behavioral sciences- i got almost 15 out of 48 Qs just on the first block on ethics. most of them were like what would you tell the patient if this and that happened. honestly, i rather have these questions than any other question, because i could narrow these down to two.

physiology- this was the majority of the exam. and every single possibility was there. questions were basically like patient has cushing syndrome. and then in the answer choices, there are Na+, Cl-, Mg+ and K+ -- all had either a down or up arrow. ALMOST EVERY single possibility was there, from A through I -- no joke! you had to know it. of course, i narrowed it down to two and it was a eenie meanie miney moe from that point on.

micro- i thought FA covered this well, but the step 1 used all these weird agars and tests that FA doesn't mention. i just answered these with what the most common pathogen would be found.

psychiatry- i got like 3 questions. pretty straight forward.

overall, i had 7 blocks of 48 questions. one media clip, which was a heart sound. i was unsure about 15-20 questions per block.

NBME 1: 184 (before memorizing stuff)
NBME 2: 206 (2 days before)
UW assessment: 192
UW: 70% complete; 47% untimed tutor

i don't know how u guys are getting 240s on those nbme's or getting 70% on those qbanks / UWs without redoing questions. i feel like my stats are more like where an average medical student is at. i may be wrong....

i took it the same day as you and it sounds like we had the same test!
 
after going through what you just went through, what last minute advice would you give to thunderdog of last week?

I know the question is not directed toward me, but i'd advise you rest, sleep, exercise and goljan HY questions for the usmle
 
after going through what you just went through, what last minute advice would you give to thunderdog of last week?

very good question. i honestly think the last week is the MOST important week of all of them. it doesn't matter if you study for 1 month, 6 months, or 2 weeks... in the end, you will feel that you forgot everything you learned in all that time. you will feel as if you only studied for a week. that's why the last week is the most important.

in the final week (if i had to do it again) --
1. don't take any NBME exams, USMLE assessments, or anything that gives you a score. if you bomb the practice, you will feel lousy and down. you need to go into step 1 with confidence and be able tell yourself that you studied your ass off for this many weeks and you will do your best.
2. review all of FA or whatever high yield notes you made for yourself. make sure you can commit it to memory. i sadly had to go over all of pharmacology twice each day (all 300 or so drugs twice each day) for 4 days straight to make sure i could remember all the side effects, mechanisms, resistance mechanisms, etc.
3. by the time u get to last week, don't burn yourself out with UW or qbank questions. just do some each day. if you don't get through the whole bank, then that's fine. i highly suggest UW because i thought the usmle style and length of clinical questions most resembled UW. i had both UW and kaplan qbank.
4. on the day before the exam, i know a lot of people didn't do anything. they just went to see a movie or took the entire day off. i personally don't recommend that. if i did that, that would be the first day i start forgetting stuff, and plus, i would feel so guilty if i bombed the test. on the last day, i just went over all pharm drugs once, did some UW questions, looked over cardio, neuro, biochem, and embryo all once. i was done by about 9:30PM at night. rested for about 3-4 hours. then went to sleep. fatigue was not a factor for me on the exam. i actually felt pretty energized after the exam. i only slept like 5 hour. i had a friend come knock on my door at 6:30PM in case i overslept.

hope that helps.
 
Did anyone notice what they think are errors in the exam?


I had a question which asked me about the alveolar blood gas in a completely infarcted lung. I was under the impression that an infarcted lung cannot have blood and thus cannot have a blood gas. I think they were trying to ask for alveolar gas pressures in the infarcted lung, but it still seems poor.

I also had a question where they meant to put a comma and instead, had a period when they were doing alleles for HLA types.

Lastly, I had another question which said that there was a patient with nephrogenic diabetes insipidus who after desmopressin was administered did not experience an increase in either urine or serum osmolality. This one I'm not sure about, but is that even possible? If the urine osmolality stays low, then you are drawing water out of ECF and your serum osmolality has to rise, unless enough water is coming out of the ICF to compensate...which seems highly unlikely.

Also, any ideas on how they determine which questions to throw out? I'd like to see some of the ones I got wrong thrown out...

I remember some people mentioning last year that errors in your question stem most likely means that the question is experimental. Someone actually said they had a question where two or three out of 5 answer choices were the same...or something like that.

As for the nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, I think the question seems right to me? Since ADH ain't workin in the kidney, giving it to them exogenously is not gonna change their status at all which will be one of dehydration to begin with. Unless, there was something else in the stem that made you think otherwise....
 
I remember some people mentioning last year that errors in your question stem most likely means that the question is experimental. Someone actually said they had a question where two or three out of 5 answer choices were the same...or something like that.

As for the nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, I think the question seems right to me? Since ADH ain't workin in the kidney, giving it to them exogenously is not gonna change their status at all which will be one of dehydration to begin with. Unless, there was something else in the stem that made you think otherwise....

I had a question that referred to a diagram that wasn't there. Something about "which tRNA would come next in the sequence", but there was no sequence. Just the prompt, chart to convert codons to associated amino acids, and answer choices. I scrolled like crazy looking for something to answer the question.
 
I had a question that referred to a diagram that wasn't there. Something about "which tRNA would come next in the sequence", but there was no sequence. Just the prompt, chart to convert codons to associated amino acids, and answer choices. I scrolled like crazy looking for something to answer the question.

What did you end up doing? Just going onto the next Question or asking one of the people at the Center? Sorry if thats a silly Question. I guess I would be worried that my whole test was screwed up. 🙂
 
What did you end up doing? Just going onto the next Question or asking one of the people at the Center? Sorry if thats a silly Question. I guess I would be worried that my whole test was screwed up. 🙂

I just put down an answer and forgot about it. I didn't think it'd be a good idea to spend 5 minutes explaining that in order to decode a genetic sequence using tRNA molecule anticodons, I'd need a template mRNA and trust that they'd see the question as an error and could advise me...what, not to worry about it? And I guess I figured it was so blatant that the USMLE would throw it out, or if it was screwed up for me it was screwed up for everyone else and thus wouldn't hurt my score, but I am concerned that I should perhaps report it. However, I have no idea how to go about doing that. It sounds like it's possibly an experimental question, but obviously I'm not 100% confident of that. If anyone has any advice on it, I'd love to hear it.
 
Maybe you could email NBME, let them know your test date/location and of the error? Obviously you're not going to waste time asking the prometric guy as he has no clue what to do, and would probably flag you for "irregular behavior" or some crap. Sucks but I am sure when it won't hurt you as everyone with that version would guess.
 
i don't know how u guys are getting 240s on those nbme's or getting 70% on those qbanks / UWs without redoing questions. i feel like my stats are more like where an average medical student is at. i may be wrong....

:laugh: No way am I a stellar SDNer. I would consider myself very average.

All these self-proclaimed superstars on SDN might lull you into a fall sense of security about the test and you might start slacking. I know there was a point after reading a few of these USMLE day experience posts, where I was actually telling myself that getting a 250+ on this thing is something everyone can do just by memorizing first aid and doing lots of qbank.

Anyway, thanks for taking the time to write out the review. It helped me get back on track.

:laugh: I was telling myself this too. I'm glad I'm not the only one here that thinks this.
 
I had the same question. I'm glad to see I wasn't the only one with that problem. I kept looking for the diagram for a couple of minutes. I reported it to the proctor and she is going to tell NBME. I'm sure it was messed up for everyone and the question will be thrown out.
 
Just took the test today. It was pretty comparable to the NBMEs. Required a little more broad, vague knowledge that isn't really found in review books, IMO.

Had some screwballs, like a 9 possible answers question about a pt. lacking an "anal wink" and what would happen if a balloon was inflated in their anal sphincter, to the easiest question I've seen between 4 NBMEs and all of USMLE world (a 3 possible answers question about a diagram of bacterial dna transfer).

Also had one question directly word for word from an NBME and one question that was almost word for word from the USMLE World Self Assessment (blue sclera).

Glad its over!
 
What a great day! Like most other people, I feel like I didn't do as well as I had hoped for. Overall the test was harder than and of the NBME's that I took. (1-220 before studying, 2-257,3-259,4-259) The reason I say this is I always count the number of questions that I'm unsure about, and consistently had a couple more than I did on any of my last 3 NBMEs. As far as how the blocks were divided, they were pretty much equal around the board, except for one that was kind of ridiculous. It was my second block, the same one that had the AV question that I think I missed. Either the audio quality was horrible or I am just terrible at listening to murmurs in a baby. I was worried about getting tired/bored, but that didn't happen at all. The day was over before I knew it, and I didnt get done a minute early. I was up to the limit on every block, and one block had to really rush in order to get done, (mainly because I had a good deal to go back over again).

Overall I felt prepared though, and more studying wouldn't have helped me much. The stuff that I missed was stuff that I wasn't focusing on anyway, so I don't think it would have mattered. Anatomy stands out in my mind as the toughest questions, followed by behavioral science (quote type crap).

It's a great feeling knowing I'm done, but the waiting is going to kill me. If I do well I'll post my study plan/schedule.
 
I had a question that referred to a diagram that wasn't there. Something about "which tRNA would come next in the sequence", but there was no sequence. Just the prompt, chart to convert codons to associated amino acids, and answer choices. I scrolled like crazy looking for something to answer the question.

I had the same question, I think. I interpreted it to mean "which tRNA is correctly charged" i.e. has an amino acid that matches the anticodon, but who knows. In any case it screamed experimental to me too.
 
have you guys taken the USMLE World Sim exam and if so do you think it is representative of the real things thanks!
5 days until the big dance
 
I had the same question, I think. I interpreted it to mean "which tRNA is correctly charged" i.e. has an amino acid that matches the anticodon, but who knows. In any case it screamed experimental to me too.

I took the exam in April and that sounds really similar to one I had. I remember thinking it was missing something before finally figuring out what it was asking.
 
I had the same question, I think. I interpreted it to mean "which tRNA is correctly charged" i.e. has an amino acid that matches the anticodon, but who knows. In any case it screamed experimental to me too.

Really? I have a fear that I misread it, I suppose it's possible it asked what tRNA was correctly charged...but I swear I read that thing about a million times...
 
Any ideas on whether the audio/visual question is going to be experimental. I tried listening to it and things were moving too fast for me to focus on the actual sound. I read the stem and picked a reasonable answer, but I'm hoping this is just practice.
 
Hey all. Just took the big test this morning and thought I'd share my experience while it's still fresh in my mind.

Overall: I had the 48 questions per block with 1 A/V question (a heart murmur question that did not require you to even listen... it was all in the history and physical). Overall, I felt that my test was pretty hard. To me, it was not at all similar to any of the NBME forms I did (3, 4, and 6). I also felt that it was overall just as tough, and at times a bit tougher, than UWorld questions. I'll write about what I remember about each subject.

Anatomy: Overall, anatomy was not too tough, but I had some questions I was not prepared for. I had a few abdominal CT scans, a few skull x-rays (one was an epidural hematoma), and one lower extremity question (fibular head injury, common peroneal nerve injury). I got NO questions on upper extremity. No questions about the brachial plexus or it's derivatives (which I was prepared for). I did have a question about lateral epicondylitis and what deficits are seen with it (I was not expecting this). Oh, and I had a foot question (damnit, I'm a doctor not a podiatrist! hehe).

Behavioral science: I had a few of those "what would you say/do next" questions, but not as much as I was expecting... maybe 15 total. Half of them were easy (obvious right choice), the other half were more difficult (narrow down to 2, pick 1).

Biostats: The questions I got were pretty tough. I only got one relative risk calculation, and one true prevalence calculation using the 2x2 squares. The rest of the questions were long experiments with data. Then you'd have to pick "which of the following conclusions can be drawn about the data." You'd be given all this data, with some p-values thrown in and some 95% confidence intervals to spice things up. These were time-consuming and difficult (at least for me). I had no calculations of PPV, NPV, specificity, senstivity, odds ratio, likelihood ratio (which I was prepared for). Overall much tougher than I expected.

Biochemistry: This subject is hard to comment on since it encompasses so many other subjects. However, the bulk of my biochem was actually molecular bio/genetics, signal transduction pathways, and regulation of metabolism. I had one question that asked "glucagon favors gluconeogenesis by decreasing the amount of which of the following." I also got a question asking me to identify a positive allosteric activator of isocitrate dehydrogenase (ADP). I had a few questions on G6PD deficiency. I had a whopping two questions on glycogen storage diseases (types 2 and 5), and ZERO questions on lysosomal diseases. I had ZERO questions on thiamine deficiency, niacin deficiency, or vitamin K deficiency. I had one question on vitamin C deficiency, and one question on vitamin A toxicity (at least I think it was). I had no PKU questions, no homocysteine/methionine stuff, and one maple syrup urine disease (kids diaper smelled like sweet sugar). Overall, biochem turned out to be nothing like I expected.

Embryology: I only had about 3 questions on embryo, and I only used First Aid. All three were pretty easy (had to know the DRG are neural crest, had an annular pancreas question).

Immuno: Pretty straightforward. I just had to be familiar with the various cytokines (TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, etc.) and the effector functions of the different cell types of the immune system. Also had a few questions about the different types of hypersensitivity reactions, a CGD question, and a X-linked agammaglobulinemia.

Micro: Another straightforward subject. I did have a few of the exotic bugs (meaning Malaria, Marburg virus, and B. anthracis). The rest were pretty common bugs such as S. pneumo, N. meningitidis, N. gonorrhea, Chlamydia, C. diff and a few TB questions. Had a few questions regarding virulence factors (of N. gonorrhea, B. pertussis, and I think C. diphtheriae). I didn't have any questions that asked for specific treatments.

Pharmacology: Overall I thought it was okay. Nothing out of the ordinary. Had to pick a drug that caused SLE-like syndrome (hydralazine), drug that caused G6PD hemolytic anemia (a sulfa drug). A familiarity of the MOAs and distinguishing adverse reactions is sufficient. I had a half-life question, an efficacy/potency question, and a few "drug A is added here... what drug gives this effect" questions.

Pathophysiology: I lumped these two subjects together because they pretty much made up the bulk of my exam. Not only did you have to make a diagnosis of the pathology, you had to know the physiology behind that particular system. So, basically you would have to know all of the feedback loops and points of regulation, especially the endocrine axes. I also had quite a few renal pathophys questions, and not as much cardio, pulmonary, or GI pathophys. I had very few questions which just asked for the diagnosis. Almost all of them required me to make a diagnosis, and then answer questions like "which of the following shows what would be found in the patients serum", then 5 or 6 answer choices with 3 or 4 different hormones and tons of arrows. I had to perform 1 physio calculation, but I can't remember it right now. Very challenging questions, with very few of the pathology that I was expecting: I had no Crohn's, no ulcerative colitis, no liver cancer, no paraneoplastic syndromes, no Osteogenesis imperfecta, no Ehlers-Danlos (but I did have a Marfan's), no adult polycystic kidney disease, no polycystic ovaries, no breast cancer.

Neuro: A lot more than I expected, but luckily I remembered stuff from 1st year neuro. I had a few questions dealing with spinal cord lesions, identifying the substantia nigra in a Parkinson's patient, and one question about the visual deficits found in a right temporal lobe lesion. I would definitely be familiar with all of the tracts in the spinal cord. Overall not too tough, but I can see it being challenging if you weren't expecting so much spinal cord stuff.

Psych: I think I had 3 or 4 questions. One I think was major depression, one was a personality disorder, and the other one was brief psychotic disorder (I think). I had no eating disorders, no schizophrenia, and not much psychopharmacology.

Like I said earlier, I think my test was much harder than the NBME forms. Of all the forms I did, parts of form 6 were similar. However, I did have 2 or 3 questions that were exactly the same. They even used the same pictures. I felt UWorld prepared me not only by adding to my knowledge base, but also by providing long-ish questions that required you to THINK about disease processes. Oh, and almost all of the questions were long. Only 1 or 2 questions per block were less than three sentences. The rest were comparable to UWorld length, and some were even longer. I would definitely recommend skimming the last few sentences of these long ones because a few of them gave a diagnostic statement at the end.

In the end, I'm glad to be finished with this thing. Good luck to those taking the test soon.
 
Hey all. Just took the big test this morning and thought I'd share my experience while it's still fresh in my mind.

Overall: I had the 48 questions per block with 1 A/V question (a heart murmur question that did not require you to even listen... it was all in the history and physical). Overall, I felt that my test was pretty hard. To me, it was not at all similar to any of the NBME forms I did (3, 4, and 6). I also felt that it was overall just as tough, and at times a bit tougher, than UWorld questions. I'll write about what I remember about each subject.

Anatomy: Overall, anatomy was not too tough, but I had some questions I was not prepared for. I had a few abdominal CT scans, a few skull x-rays (one was an epidural hematoma), and one lower extremity question (fibular head injury, common peroneal nerve injury). I got NO questions on upper extremity. No questions about the brachial plexus or it's derivatives (which I was prepared for). I did have a question about lateral epicondylitis and what deficits are seen with it (I was not expecting this). Oh, and I had a foot question (damnit, I'm a doctor not a podiatrist! hehe).

Behavioral science: I had a few of those "what would you say/do next" questions, but not as much as I was expecting... maybe 15 total. Half of them were easy (obvious right choice), the other half were more difficult (narrow down to 2, pick 1).

Biostats: The questions I got were pretty tough. I only got one relative risk calculation, and one true prevalence calculation using the 2x2 squares. The rest of the questions were long experiments with data. Then you'd have to pick "which of the following conclusions can be drawn about the data." You'd be given all this data, with some p-values thrown in and some 95% confidence intervals to spice things up. These were time-consuming and difficult (at least for me). I had no calculations of PPV, NPV, specificity, senstivity, odds ratio, likelihood ratio (which I was prepared for). Overall much tougher than I expected.

Biochemistry: This subject is hard to comment on since it encompasses so many other subjects. However, the bulk of my biochem was actually molecular bio/genetics, signal transduction pathways, and regulation of metabolism. I had one question that asked "glucagon favors gluconeogenesis by decreasing the amount of which of the following." I also got a question asking me to identify a positive allosteric activator of isocitrate dehydrogenase (ADP). I had a few questions on G6PD deficiency. I had a whopping two questions on glycogen storage diseases (types 2 and 5), and ZERO questions on lysosomal diseases. I had ZERO questions on thiamine deficiency, niacin deficiency, or vitamin K deficiency. I had one question on vitamin C deficiency, and one question on vitamin A toxicity (at least I think it was). I had no PKU questions, no homocysteine/methionine stuff, and one maple syrup urine disease (kids diaper smelled like sweet sugar). Overall, biochem turned out to be nothing like I expected.

Embryology: I only had about 3 questions on embryo, and I only used First Aid. All three were pretty easy (had to know the DRG are neural crest, had an annular pancreas question).

Immuno: Pretty straightforward. I just had to be familiar with the various cytokines (TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, etc.) and the effector functions of the different cell types of the immune system. Also had a few questions about the different types of hypersensitivity reactions, a CGD question, and a X-linked agammaglobulinemia.

Micro: Another straightforward subject. I did have a few of the exotic bugs (meaning Malaria, Marburg virus, and B. anthracis). The rest were pretty common bugs such as S. pneumo, N. meningitidis, N. gonorrhea, Chlamydia, C. diff and a few TB questions. Had a few questions regarding virulence factors (of N. gonorrhea, B. pertussis, and I think C. diphtheriae). I didn't have any questions that asked for specific treatments.

Pharmacology: Overall I thought it was okay. Nothing out of the ordinary. Had to pick a drug that caused SLE-like syndrome (hydralazine), drug that caused G6PD hemolytic anemia (a sulfa drug). A familiarity of the MOAs and distinguishing adverse reactions is sufficient. I had a half-life question, an efficacy/potency question, and a few "drug A is added here... what drug gives this effect" questions.

Pathophysiology: I lumped these two subjects together because they pretty much made up the bulk of my exam. Not only did you have to make a diagnosis of the pathology, you had to know the physiology behind that particular system. So, basically you would have to know all of the feedback loops and points of regulation, especially the endocrine axes. I also had quite a few renal pathophys questions, and not as much cardio, pulmonary, or GI pathophys. I had very few questions which just asked for the diagnosis. Almost all of them required me to make a diagnosis, and then answer questions like "which of the following shows what would be found in the patients serum", then 5 or 6 answer choices with 3 or 4 different hormones and tons of arrows. I had to perform 1 physio calculation, but I can't remember it right now. Very challenging questions, with very few of the pathology that I was expecting: I had no Crohn's, no ulcerative colitis, no liver cancer, no paraneoplastic syndromes, no Osteogenesis imperfecta, no Ehlers-Danlos (but I did have a Marfan's), no adult polycystic kidney disease, no polycystic ovaries, no breast cancer.

Neuro: A lot more than I expected, but luckily I remembered stuff from 1st year neuro. I had a few questions dealing with spinal cord lesions, identifying the substantia nigra in a Parkinson's patient, and one question about the visual deficits found in a right temporal lobe lesion. I would definitely be familiar with all of the tracts in the spinal cord. Overall not too tough, but I can see it being challenging if you weren't expecting so much spinal cord stuff.

Psych: I think I had 3 or 4 questions. One I think was major depression, one was a personality disorder, and the other one was brief psychotic disorder (I think). I had no eating disorders, no schizophrenia, and not much psychopharmacology.

Like I said earlier, I think my test was much harder than the NBME forms. Of all the forms I did, parts of form 6 were similar. However, I did have 2 or 3 questions that were exactly the same. They even used the same pictures. I felt UWorld prepared me not only by adding to my knowledge base, but also by providing long-ish questions that required you to THINK about disease processes. Oh, and almost all of the questions were long. Only 1 or 2 questions per block were less than three sentences. The rest were comparable to UWorld length, and some were even longer. I would definitely recommend skimming the last few sentences of these long ones because a few of them gave a diagnostic statement at the end.

In the end, I'm glad to be finished with this thing. Good luck to those taking the test soon.

thanks for typing all this up...from reading your post it seems like you were well prepared...any suggestions for biostats? take care
 
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