EXCEL in your neurology clerkship and on the USMLE Step 2 CK "This book is extraordinary. The clinical cases are engaging and enjoyable to read, maximizing the absorption of valuable clinical information. I recommend this book to all medical students on clinical rotations."--Lance E. Davis, medical student, UT Southwestern Medical School
You need exposure to cases to pass the USMLE and shelf exams and that's exactly what this innovative resource offers. Written by experienced educators, "Case Files: Neurology" helps you think through diagnosis and managemenet when confronting neurological clinical problems. 53 high-yield clinical cases focus on the core competencies for the neurology clerkship. Each case includes an extended discussion, definitions of key terms, clinical pearls, and USMLE-format review questions. It's an interactive learning system that helps you learn instead of just memorize. Featuring: 53 neurology cases with complete discussions and review Q&A Clinical pearls highlight key points Primer on how to approach the patient Helps you learn in the context of real patients
In my humble opinion, the neurology shelf exam is the hardest one out there. (Of course, I'm biased because 1. Neuro was my least favorite clerkship and 2. It was the first clerkship shelf exam I took.) But regardless, I think that this book did a somewhat decent job of explaining basic neurology cases, how to work them up, how to treat them, etc. Don't rely on the questions at the end of each case to test your knowledge, though - they are NOTHING like the shelf exam questions in terms of format, difficulty, etc. I would definitely supplement with another question bank.
I’m a fan of all the Case Files series. They’re always thorough, pretty fun to read, and accessible on my kindle. They’ve always helped me pass my shelves.
This one is especially good because, man, Neuro is tough.
How is it different from other Case Files? Well usually as I’m reading through a case in the other Case Files - let’s say Family Medicine and Emergency Medicine, I can usually think of the most likely diagnosis and maybe some differentials. But for Neurology Case Files, there were sooooo many times I was scratching my head, struggling to figure out a diagnosis. For that, I think this particular Case Files is super useful because it goes into details about some Neurology diagnoses that I’m not thinking of a lot. It made me aware of some of my blind spots.
Update: I received my Neuro Shelf grade and happy to report I not only passed but honored the exam. Besides a practice NBME and some neurology notes / practice questions put together by students, this book was my main source of study material.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.