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© 2005-2019 Crack the NBDE. Home Purchase Help Login Purchase Help Login. Crack the NBDE mimics and mirrors the exact look and feel of the official. NBDE test interface in light of the new changes so there are no surprises on the day of.

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I passed it in August! • Crack the nbde. Some people say that it's not necessary but honestly, it really prepared me mentally for the 8 hour shift. The questions are very similar and I actually found it harder than the actual exam • Released exams. As many as you can get your hands on. • Know your hormones, effects and points of origin. Oxytocin and Prolactin, for example, both produce lactation.

But under what circumstances? Where do they come from? 3 questions came out in my exam, good thing I knew the answer. • Know your anatomy well.

Nerves, origins and ramifications. Same for arteries. Points of origin, etc. • Know your Clostridiums, lol. It's really important to know what bacteria produces what and under which circumstances, same for viruses. It's also helpful to know which viruses are enveloped/spiked/rna/retro etc etc etc. I'm taking mine this 29th!

Here are some tips from my classmates who have passed: 1) Go through the dental decks and try to understand all of the back as well as the answer. 2) Study only head and neck anatomy, as there were few if no non-head/neck questions on the test. 3) Know the dental anatomy since these questions are easier and free points. 4) There seemed to be a lot of biochem enzyme questions, so know the important ones (PFK, PEPCK, amino transferases, etc.) 5) A lot of case study questions that branched from your ability to identify the correct pathological disease. If you think that a case is chronic myelogenic leukemia when its in fact Burkitt's lymphoma, you will likely get the follow up questions wrong. Any tips from your end?

I'm taking it on the 7th. I've heard the decks are not that great for biochem (anyone confirm?) and to supplement it with class notes/first aid. Someone told me to reference the ada for the complete breakdown of questions in each section to help to see how many questions were in each subsection. Don't have the website handy, but I screenshotted these yesterday. Solar fire free. My approach is to really hammer dental anatomy and occlusion because that is an ace-able section that there is a finite amount of information and easily remembered/learned. I've heard biochem is kind of a crapshoot and can get very (too?!) detailed.

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We have a really good histology and physiology course so I'm kind of focusing on those, to absorb the minor hit I'll take infectious disease because our instruction there was a little lacking. And for studying tactics, I've been stopwatching myself to see exactly just how long I study per day. It helps me stay off of the internet/reddit while I'm studying and I can tell just how many good hours I've put in that day. A 9.5hrs:(, but seriously more like:'( • • • • •.

I passed it this June! Honestly, since it's P/F now - just go with decks (read the backs too!) and old tests. When I took my mock boards, I (along with the rest of my class) would become a brain dead zombie around question 120. The whole point of doing old tests is to get your stamina down and make sure you can answer 200 straight questions using a coherent thought process without going insane.

It's really pointless to say know these few subjects because the test is completely random and it has a knack for asking you questions on the topics you didn't study;) I could say know your head and neck anatomy and you'll get a testlet on the brachial plexus or know your biochem enzymes and all your biochem questions will be on random stuff like the urea cycle or nucleotide synthesis. All in all, your classes should have prepared you sufficiently so there's no need to worry!