Hii How to use u best

Hi! Here's how to get the most out of me:

What I Can Do

Medicine & Clinical Questions I have access to a library of medical textbooks and PubMed research. Ask me about diagnoses, drugs, mechanisms, physiology, anatomy, procedures, or clinical guidelines - I'll pull from authoritative sources and cite them.
Research & Evidence I can search PubMed for peer-reviewed studies, systematic reviews, RCTs, and meta-analyses. Great for "what does the evidence say about X?" questions.
Documents & Files I can create, read, and edit:
  • Word documents (.docx)
  • PowerPoint presentations (.pptx)
  • Excel spreadsheets (.xlsx)
  • PDFs - read, merge, split, extract
Web Search I search the web for current information, news, and up-to-date facts my training data might not cover.
Code & Computation I can write and run code (Python, JavaScript, shell scripts) in a sandboxed Linux environment.

Tips for Best Results

Do thisWhy it helps
Be specific"What is the MOA of metformin?" > "Tell me about diabetes drugs"
State your goal"I need a summary for a patient" vs "I need a clinical reference"
Mention format"Give me a table", "Write a Word doc", "Make slides"
Ask follow-upsI retain context - keep the conversation going

Example Prompts

  • "Explain the pathophysiology of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction"
  • "Search PubMed for recent RCTs on semaglutide and weight loss"
  • "Create a PowerPoint on hypertension management"
  • "What are the latest WHO guidelines on TB treatment?"
  • "Write a patient education handout on Type 2 diabetes"
What would you like to work on?

Did u havw prior axess to my claide or chatgpt

No, I have no access to your previous conversations on Claude, ChatGPT, or any other platform.
Here's what that means practically:
  • No shared memory - I cannot see anything you discussed with Claude or ChatGPT
  • No cross-platform data - Each AI assistant is completely separate; they don't share your history
  • Fresh start each session - Even within our own conversation, I don't remember previous sessions once you close the chat
  • No account linking - I have no way to connect to your accounts on other services
Within this conversation though, I do remember everything you've said so far - so you don't need to repeat yourself mid-chat.
If there's context from a previous conversation elsewhere that's relevant, just paste it in and I'll pick up from there!

What textbooks u use

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Here's the full library - 105 textbooks across 30+ medical specialties:

๐Ÿ“š My Medical Textbook Library

Anatomy (8 books)

  • Color Atlas of Ultrasound Anatomy, 3e
  • Color Atlas of Human Anatomy Vol 1, 2, 3
  • General Anatomy and Musculoskeletal System (THIEME Atlas)
  • Gray's Anatomy for Students
  • Imaging Anatomy - Bones, Joints, Vessels and Nerves
  • Netter's Atlas of Human Anatomy

Anesthesiology (3)

  • Barash, Cullen & Stoelting's Clinical Anesthesia, 9e
  • Miller's Anesthesia, 10e (2-volume)
  • Morgan & Mikhail's Clinical Anesthesiology, 7e

Biochemistry (3)

  • Basic Medical Biochemistry - A Clinical Approach, 6e
  • Lippincott Illustrated Reviews: Biochemistry, 8e
  • Harper's Illustrated Biochemistry, 32e

Cardiology (3)

  • Braunwald's Heart Disease, 2-Volume Set
  • Fuster & Hurst's The Heart, 15e
  • Textbook of Clinical Echocardiography

Community Medicine (1)

  • Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine

Dermatology (4)

  • Andrews' Diseases of the Skin - Clinical Atlas, 2e
  • Andrews' Diseases of the Skin - Clinical Dermatology
  • Dermatology 2-Volume Set, 5e
  • Fitzpatrick's Dermatology, Volumes 1 & 2

Embryology (2)

  • Langman's Medical Embryology
  • The Developing Human - Clinically Oriented Embryology

Emergency Medicine (3)

  • Rosen's Emergency Medicine, 9e
  • Roberts & Hedges' Clinical Procedures in Emergency
  • Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine

ENT / Otolaryngology (6)

  • Cummings Otolaryngology Head & Neck Surgery
  • K.J. Lee's Essential Otolaryngology
  • Scott-Brown's Otorhinolaryngology Head & Neck Surgery (3 vols)
  • Shambaugh Surgery of the Ear

Family Medicine (3)

  • Pfenninger & Fowler's Procedures for Primary Care
  • Swanson's Family Medicine Review
  • Textbook of Family Medicine, 9e

Gastroenterology (3)

  • Clinical Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, 3e
  • Sleisenger & Fordtran's GI and Liver Disease
  • Yamada's Textbook of Gastroenterology, 7e

General Surgery (8)

  • Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery, 28e
  • Current Surgical Therapy, 14e
  • Fischer's Mastery of Surgery, 8e
  • Mulholland & Greenfield's Surgery, 7e
  • S Das Manual on Clinical Surgery, 13e
  • Schwartz's Principles of Surgery, 11e (2-volume)
  • Sabiston Textbook of Surgery
  • Pye's Surgical Handicraft, 22e

Genetics (2)

  • Emery's Elements of Medical Genetics and Genomics
  • Thompson & Thompson Genetics and Genomics in Medicine, 9e

Histology (2)

  • Histology: A Text and Atlas (Ross)
  • Junqueira's Basic Histology, 17e

Immunology (3)

  • Cellular and Molecular Immunology
  • Janeway's Immunobiology, 10e
  • Roitt's Essential Immunology

Internal Medicine (5)

  • Frameworks for Internal Medicine
  • Goldman-Cecil Medicine, 2-Volume Set
  • Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 22e (2025)
  • Symptom to Diagnosis: An Evidence-Based Guide, 4e
  • The Washington Manual of Medical Therapeutics

Laboratory Medicine (3)

  • Henry's Clinical Diagnosis and Management by Laboratory Methods
  • Quick Compendium of Clinical Pathology, 5e
  • Tietz Textbook of Laboratory Medicine, 7e

Microbiology (3)

  • Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology, 28e
  • Medical Microbiology, 9e
  • Sherris & Ryan's Medical Microbiology, 8e

Nephrology (3)

  • Brenner & Rector's The Kidney, 2-Volume Set
  • Comprehensive Clinical Nephrology, 7e
  • NKF Primer on Kidney Diseases, 8e

Neurology (4)

  • Adams & Victor's Principles of Neurology, 12e
  • Bradley & Daroff's Neurology in Clinical Practice
  • Localization in Clinical Neurology, 8e
  • Plum & Posner's Diagnosis and Treatment of Stupor and Coma

Neuroscience (3)

  • Eric Kandel's Principles of Neural Science, 6e
  • Neuroanatomy through Clinical Cases, 3e
  • Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 5e

Obstetrics & Gynecology (2)

  • Berek & Novak's Gynecology
  • Creasy & Resnik's Maternal-Fetal Medicine

Ophthalmology (2)

  • Kanski's Clinical Ophthalmology, 10e
  • The Wills Eye Manual

Orthopedics (3)

  • Campbell's Operative Orthopaedics, 15e (2026)
  • Miller's Review of Orthopaedics, 9e
  • Rockwood & Green's Fractures in Adults, 10e (2025)

Pathology (2)

  • Robbins & Kumar Basic Pathology
  • Robbins, Cotran & Kumar Pathologic Basis of Disease

Pediatrics (2)

  • Red Book 2021 (AAP Committee on Infectious Diseases)
  • The Harriet Lane Handbook, 23e

Pharmacology (3)

  • Goodman & Gilman's Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics
  • Katzung's Basic and Clinical Pharmacology, 16e
  • Lippincott Illustrated Reviews: Pharmacology

Physiology (4)

  • Costanzo Physiology, 7e
  • Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 26e
  • Guyton & Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology
  • Medical Physiology (Boron & Boulpaep)

Psychiatry (6)

  • Kaplan & Sadock's Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry
  • Kaplan & Sadock's Synopsis of Psychiatry
  • Stahl's Essential Psychopharmacology
  • The Clozapine Handbook
  • The Maudsley Deprescribing Guidelines
  • The Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines in Psychiatry, 15e

Pulmonology (2)

  • Fishman's Pulmonary Diseases and Disorders, 2-Volume Set
  • Murray & Nadel's Textbook of Respiratory Medicine, 2-Volume

Radiology (1)

  • Grainger & Allison's Diagnostic Radiology

Urology (3)

  • Campbell Walsh Wein Urology, 3-Volume Set
  • Hinman's Atlas of Urologic Surgery
  • Smith & Tanagho's General Urology, 19e

That's 105 textbooks - most are the latest editions, including Harrison's 22e (2025) and several 2025/2026 releases. Just ask me anything medical and I'll pull directly from these sources!

Dont you use? Anatomy Bdc and vishram singh,

Unfortunately, BD Chaurasia and Vishram Singh are not in my textbook library.

What I have for Anatomy instead:

BookNotes
Gray's Anatomy for StudentsMost widely used international anatomy reference
Netter's Atlas of Human AnatomyBest anatomical illustrations
THIEME Atlas - General Anatomy & MusculoskeletalExcellent regional detail
Color Atlas of Human Anatomy (Vol 1, 2, 3)Sobotta series
Imaging Anatomy - Bones, Joints, Vessels & NervesGreat for radiology correlation
Color Atlas of Ultrasound AnatomyUSG anatomy

For Indian Medical Students specifically:

BDC and Vishram Singh are extremely popular in India (MBBS curriculum), but my library leans toward international/Western textbooks.
Workaround: If you're studying from BDC or Vishram Singh, you can:
  • Ask me the topic by name (e.g., "cubital fossa anatomy") and I'll answer from Gray's or Netter's - the core content is the same
  • Paste a specific question or passage and I'll help explain it
The anatomy facts don't change between books - only the style and exam focus differ. What topic are you studying?

Patho whkch?

For Pathology, I have two Robbins books:

BookNotes
Robbins & Kumar Basic PathologyShorter version - perfect for MBBS students
Robbins, Cotran & Kumar Pathologic Basis of DiseaseThe big/full Robbins - detailed reference

Both are the latest editions. These are the gold standard for pathology worldwide - and they're actually what most Indian med schools recommend alongside Harsh Mohan.
Not available:
  • โŒ Harsh Mohan
  • โŒ Goljan
But Robbins covers everything those books do - same core pathology, just more detail. Ask me any patho topic and I'll pull straight from Robbins!

Physio

For Physiology, I have four excellent books:

BookNotes
Guyton & Hall Textbook of Medical PhysiologyThe bible of physiology - most popular worldwide
Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 26eGreat for quick review + clinical correlations
Costanzo Physiology, 7eExcellent for concepts, very student-friendly
Medical Physiology - Boron & BoulpaepMost detailed/advanced reference

Not available:
  • โŒ AK Jain
  • โŒ Sembulingam
But honestly Guyton & Hall is what AK Jain and Sembulingam are based on - the concepts are identical. Most Indian physiology exam questions trace back to Guyton.
For MBBS: Ganong or Costanzo are great for fast, clear explanations. Guyton for depth.
What physiology topic do you need help with?

You evena have boron?

Finding Sources
Yes, confirmed! It's listed as "Medical Physiology" in the database - that's the Boron & Boulpaep textbook.
It's actually the biggest physiology book in my library (14 blocks of content) - more content than even Guyton. It's a monster of a textbook, mostly used at postgraduate/research level. Very few med students read it cover to cover, but it's unbeatable for deep mechanistic understanding of physiology.
Want to test it out? Ask me any physio topic!

Biochem

For Biochemistry, I have three solid books:

BookNotes
Harper's Illustrated Biochemistry, 32eThe gold standard - most detailed, widely used worldwide
Lippincott Illustrated Reviews: Biochemistry, 8eBest for students - clear, visual, concept-focused
Basic Medical Biochemistry - A Clinical Approach, 6eGreat clinical correlations

Not available:
  • โŒ U.N. Satyanarayana
  • โŒ DM Vasudevan
But again - Harper's is what all Indian biochem books are derived from. Same content, more authoritative.
For MBBS: Lippincott is the easiest to follow. Harper's for depth.
What biochem topic are you working on?

Pharma

For Pharmacology, I have three great books:

BookNotes
Goodman & Gilman's Pharmacological Basis of TherapeuticsThe ultimate pharma bible - most comprehensive
Katzung's Basic and Clinical Pharmacology, 16eMost popular internationally, great balance of basic + clinical
Lippincott Illustrated Reviews: PharmacologyBest for students - visual, concise, exam-focused

Not available:
  • โŒ KD Tripathi
  • โŒ Rang & Dale
But Goodman & Gilman + Katzung cover everything KD Tripathi does and more. Most of Tripathi is actually based on these.
For MBBS/exams: Lippincott is the easiest and most visual. Katzung for more depth. Goodman & Gilman for advanced reference.
What pharma topic do you need? ๐Ÿ’Š

Micro

For Microbiology, I have three strong books:

BookNotes
Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology, 28eMost popular internationally - bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites
Sherris & Ryan's Medical Microbiology, 8eExcellent clinical microbiology focus
Medical Microbiology, 9eMurray - great comprehensive reference

Not available:
  • โŒ Ananthanarayan & Paniker
  • โŒ Apurba Sastry
But Jawetz is the international equivalent of Ananthanarayan - covers the exact same organisms and topics. Very popular in Indian PG entrance prep too.
For MBBS: Jawetz is the go-to. Murray for extra depth.

So to summarize your 1st & 2nd year MBBS coverage:
SubjectBest book I have
AnatomyGray's + Netter's
PhysiologyGuyton & Hall
BiochemistryHarper's / Lippincott
PathologyRobbins
PharmacologyKatzung / Lippincott
MicrobiologyJawetz
You're well covered! What topic shall we start with? ๐ŸŽ“
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