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If I do this much of questions for my, for my exam from the portion given above, is this enough? हाँ।

Your list covers 24 important anatomy topics - here's my honest assessment:

Is This Enough? - Honest Analysis

The list is well-chosen but needs gap-filling in a few areas.

What's Strong in Your List:

  • Upper limb is well covered: Shoulder joint, Axilla, Cubital fossa, Brachial plexus, Axillary nerve, Carpal tunnel, Flexor retinaculum, Ulnar nerve, Radioculnar joint, Lumbricales & Interossei
  • Thorax: Bronchopulmonary segments, Superior mediastinum, Histology (always asked)
  • Abdomen: Stomach bed, Supports of uterus, Arterial supply of stomach, Relations of kidney, Spleen, Inguinal canal (struck through - don't skip this!)
  • Neuro: Internal capsule, Corpus callosum (white fibres)
  • General: Synovial joint, Rotator cuff, Bone (general anatomy)

⚠️ Gaps / What Might Be Missing (depending on your syllabus):

AreaPossibly Missing Topics
Lower limbFemoral triangle, Popliteal fossa, Sciatic nerve, Foot arches
Head & NeckCranial nerves, Parotid gland, Thyroid gland, Cavernous sinus
EmbryologyDepends on your exam - often 1-2 questions
PelvisPelvic diaphragm, Perineum
ThoraxLeft lung bronchopulmonary segments (you have Right)

Key Observations:

  1. Shoulder Joint (15M) - you've noted it correctly as a high-weightage topic with full coverage needed
  2. Inguinal Canal is struck through - don't remove it, it's a classic exam question
  3. Histology topics are vague - confirm which histo slides/topics are in your portion
  4. Internal Capsule - great inclusion, often asked in neuroanatomy

Verdict:

This list is ~70-75% sufficient for a solid pass/good score IF your exam is primarily upper limb + abdomen focused. If your exam includes lower limb and head & neck in the portion, you need to add those topics.
Tip: Check your previous year question papers against this list - that will give you the clearest picture of coverage.

What other topics does your exam portion include?

I should be asking you that question, not the other way around! 😄
I don't have access to your exam syllabus or question paper. To give you a proper gap analysis, please share:
  1. What exam is this? (MBBS 1st year anatomy? Which university?)
  2. What is the full portion/syllabus given to you for this exam?
  3. Any previous year papers you have access to?
Once you share that, I can tell you exactly what's missing from your list and what you should add or skip.

I am bpt 1st year student and i have terminal exam according muhs and portion is upper limb,thorax,abdomen,cerebellum

Searching the Web

MUHS BPT 1st year anatomy syllabus upper limb thorax abdomen cerebellum terminal exam

Searching the Web

MUHS BPT first year anatomy important questions upper limb thorax abdomen

Now I have enough to give you a solid, detailed answer. Here's the full breakdown:

BPT 1st Year Anatomy - MUHS Terminal Exam

Portion: Upper Limb | Thorax | Abdomen | Cerebellum


✅ What Your List Already Covers Well

TopicStatus
Shoulder Joint (articular surfaces, ligaments, movements, clinical)✅ Covered
Axilla (contents, boundaries, artery, nerve, clinical)✅ Covered
Cubital Fossa✅ Covered
Brachial Plexus✅ Covered
Axillary Nerve (origin, course)✅ Covered
Lumbricales & Interossei of hand✅ Covered
Carpal Tunnel (contents, boundaries, compression syndrome)✅ Covered
Flexor Retinaculum✅ Covered
Ulnar Nerve✅ Covered
Radioculnar joint movements✅ Covered
Rotator Cuff✅ Covered
Synovial Joint✅ Covered
Stomach bed (structures forming it)✅ Covered
Supports of Uterus✅ Covered
Arterial supply of Stomach✅ Covered
Relations of Kidney✅ Covered
Spleen✅ Covered
Diff between Large & Small Intestine✅ Covered
Bronchopulmonary segments - Right lung✅ Covered
Superior Mediastinum (boundaries & contents)✅ Covered
Internal Capsule✅ Covered
Corpus Callosum (white fibres)✅ Covered
Bone - General anatomy✅ Covered
Histology topics✅ Covered

⚠️ Missing Topics You MUST Add

Upper Limb (High Priority)

  • Median Nerve - origin, course, branches, clinical (very commonly asked)
  • Radial Nerve - origin, course, injuries (wrist drop)
  • Elbow Joint - type, ligaments, movements, carrying angle
  • Wrist Joint - articular surfaces, movements
  • Axillary Artery - parts, branches, relations
  • Anatomical snuffbox - contents, clinical significance
  • Palmaris longus / thenar muscles - short note
  • Supero-lateral surface of humerus (you have it listed as #12 - keep it)

Thorax (High Priority)

  • Left lung bronchopulmonary segments - you only have Right lung noted; Left is also asked
  • Pleura - layers, recesses, nerve supply, clinical
  • Diaphragm - openings, structures passing through, nerve supply
  • Heart - surfaces, borders, blood supply (coronary arteries) - very common
  • Pericardium - layers, sinuses

Abdomen (High Priority)

  • Liver - surfaces, lobes, ligaments, blood supply
  • Inguinal Canal ⚠️ - you have crossed this out - DO NOT skip it, it is a standard exam question
  • Portal vein - formation, tributaries, portosystemic anastomosis
  • Peritoneum - folds, recesses
  • Pancreas - relations, duct
  • Rectus sheath - formation, contents

Cerebellum (Your Entire Cerebellum Section is Missing!)

This is in your portion but not a single cerebellum topic is in your list. Add:
  • Cerebellum - lobes, fissures, functions (connections for BPT - very important)
  • Cerebellar peduncles - superior, middle, inferior (connections)
  • Functions of cerebellum - clinical features of cerebellar lesion (ataxia, dysmetria, etc.) - extremely important for BPT as it's directly relevant to physiotherapy
  • Blood supply of cerebellum

📊 Revised Coverage Estimate

SectionYour Current Coverage
Upper Limb~65%
Thorax~50%
Abdomen~60%
Cerebellum0% - nothing covered!
Overall: ~55-60% of the portion - not enough for a safe pass without adding the missing topics above.

🎯 Priority Order for Remaining Time

  1. Cerebellum - add all topics immediately (zero coverage right now)
  2. Median & Radial nerve - classic upper limb questions
  3. Heart - standard thorax question
  4. Inguinal canal - un-cross it and study it
  5. Liver & Portal vein - abdomen staples
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