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Can you make me under 1000 rank in remaining 50 days

In neet pg 2026

Asking for Preferences
Here is your 50-Day NEET PG 2026 Battle Plan to crack under Rank 1000.

Reality Check First

Moving from Rank 20,000+ to under 1,000 in 50 days is a steep jump - but not impossible if you execute hard and smart. Top rankers in this range typically score 280-300+/300. You need to convert weak subjects into average ones and average into strong ones. Surgery and OBG being your base is a good start - those carry decent weightage.

Your 50-Day Structure

Phase 1 - Days 1 to 20: High-Yield Subject Blitz

Focus: Subjects with the most questions and fastest score gains.
Priority order (weakest to fix first):
SubjectWeightageYour StatusAction
Medicine~18-20%WeakHigh priority - must fix
PSM/Community~8-10%UnknownFormula-heavy, high ROI
Pharmacology~8%UnknownPure recall, revise standard tables
Pathology~8%UnknownRevise Gobind Rai Garg short notes
Surgery~10%StrongMaintain only, 1 revision
OBG~8%StrongMaintain only, 1 revision
Pediatrics~6%UnknownVaccines, milestones, emergency doses
Anatomy/Physio/Biochem~12%UnknownFocus only on repeat PYQs
Daily schedule (Days 1-20):
  • 6:00 AM - 8:00 AM: Previous Year Questions (PYQs) from one subject (2 hrs)
  • 8:00 AM - 12:00 PM: Subject deep revision - Medicine or weak subject (4 hrs)
  • 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM: Pharmacology / PSM alternating days (2 hrs)
  • 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM: Pathology / Microbiology alternating days (2 hrs)
  • 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM: Surgery or OBG - quick revision to lock in marks (2 hrs)
  • 8:00 PM - 10:00 PM: Mock 40-question subject test + error analysis (2 hrs)

Phase 2 - Days 21 to 38: Integration + Grand Tests

Focus: Full-length mocks, time management, and plugging leaks.
  • Take 2 full grand tests per week (DAMS, PrepLadder, DBMCI format)
  • Spend equal time on post-test analysis as the test itself - every wrong answer gets a note
  • Do NOT start new topics. Only revise flagged weak points from mocks
  • Revise Surgery + OBG once more to cement your edge
  • Make a "High-Yield Mistake Sheet" - one page per subject of your personal error patterns
Daily schedule (Days 21-38):
  • 6:00 AM - 12:00 PM: Grand test day (alternate days) or subject revision
  • 12:00 PM - 3:00 PM: Test analysis / targeted revision
  • 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM: Weak subject focused PYQ drilling
  • 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM: Image-based / clinical vignette practice
  • 8:00 PM - 10:00 PM: Rapid recall revision (flashcards, tables, mnemonics)

Phase 3 - Days 39 to 50: Final Sprint

Focus: Revision only, peak performance, test-taking strategy.
  • No new topics at all
  • Revise only your mistake sheets and high-yield notes
  • 1 full grand test every 2 days
  • Sleep 7 hours minimum - memory consolidation is non-negotiable at this stage
  • Work on speed: NEET PG rewards fast, accurate recall. Practice 50 questions in 45 minutes

Subject-Specific Tips for Your Profile

Since Surgery is strong:
  • Focus on post-op complications, staging of cancers, and trauma protocols - these are common traps
  • Lock in orthopedics (common fractures, nerve injuries) under Surgery allied
Since OBG is strong:
  • CTG interpretation, partograph, emergency obstetrics, and MTP act updates are frequent
  • PCOS, infertility, and contraception are consistent scorers
Medicine (your biggest opportunity):
  • Cardiology ECGs, nephrology (GN patterns), rheumatology (criteria), neurology (stroke, seizure management)
  • Use Dr. Mudit Khanna or PrepLadder Medicine videos for rapid high-yield revision

Resources to Use (50-day appropriate)

ResourcePurpose
PrepLadder / DAMS appSubject-wise PYQs and mocks
Marrow / DocTutorialsVideo lectures for weak subjects only
Across app or NBE appNBE-style grand tests
Gobind Rai Garg (Patho)Short notes, best for revision
Amit Ashish (PSM)Standard PSM reference
Surgery - Bailey & Bailey MCQsShort revisions

Weekly Milestones to Track Progress

WeekGoal
End of Week 1Finish Medicine PYQs + 1 subject revision
End of Week 2Pathology + Pharmacology revision done
End of Week 3PSM + Pediatrics locked, first grand test rank tracked
End of Week 5Mock rank should be in 3000-5000 range
End of Week 6Mock rank 1000-2000, full mistake sheet ready
Day 50Final revision complete, strategy locked

Honest Advice

  • Rank 20,000+ to sub-1000 is a significant jump - it requires near-flawless execution and some luck on exam day
  • Your Surgery + OBG strength gives you a real edge - many candidates are weak there
  • The single biggest lever you have: fixing Medicine. It is the highest-weightage subject and most people leave marks on the table there
  • Do NOT attempt to cover everything. Cover the right things deeply
You have 50 days and 10+ hours/day - that is 500+ hours. Used wisely, that is enough to make a serious move. Stay consistent, track your mock ranks weekly, and adjust the plan based on where you are losing marks.
Good luck - you can do this.

Is there a way to rretain more in forst read only

Yes, absolutely. First-read retention is a skill, and these techniques are backed by how memory actually works:

Why You Forget After First Read

Your brain discards information it thinks is unimportant. The goal is to trick it into flagging things as important during the first read itself.

Top Techniques for First-Read Retention

1. The Question-First Method (Most Powerful)

Before reading any topic, ask yourself: "What kind of MCQ can be made from this?"
  • Read the heading, pause, and predict what will be asked
  • Then read to confirm or correct your prediction
  • This activates active recall before passive reading even begins

2. Read in Chunks, Not Pages

  • Read 1 paragraph or concept at a time
  • After each chunk, look away and say it out loud in one sentence
  • Only move forward if you can do this - this is called the elaborative interrogation technique

3. The 3-Pass Rule (for dense topics)

  • Pass 1 (Skim - 2 min): Headings, bold text, tables, diagrams only. Build a mental skeleton.
  • Pass 2 (Read - main read): Now read fully. Your brain already has a framework to hang info on.
  • Pass 3 (Recall - 2 min): Close the book. Write down what you remember as bullet points.
Pass 3 is where the memory forms. Most people skip it.

4. Attach a Clinical Hook

For every fact, immediately link it to a patient scenario or MCQ stem.
  • Don't just read: "Warthin tumor is bilateral in 10% cases"
  • Think: "MCQ will say bilateral parotid swelling in an elderly smoker - Warthin"
  • Clinical hooks create a second memory trace alongside the factual one

5. Vocalize the Weird / Unexpected

Your brain remembers things that surprise it. When you hit a counterintuitive fact:
  • Say it out loud or whisper it
  • Example: "Wait - ACE inhibitors are CONTRAINDICATED in bilateral RAS, not just one side"
  • The act of flagging surprise boosts encoding significantly

6. Spaced Micro-Reviews (The 10-20-7 Rule)

After your first read of a topic:
  • Review your notes/recall points 10 minutes later (takes 2 min)
  • Again 20 hours later (next morning, 5 min)
  • Again 7 days later (Sunday revision, 3 min)
This alone can take retention from ~20% to ~80% without re-reading the full text.

7. Write One "Cheat Line" Per Topic

After finishing a topic, write one line that captures the highest-yield fact.
  • Example: "Achalasia - bird beak on barium, LES fails to relax, treat with Heller's myotomy"
  • By the end of 50 days, you have a 50-page cheat sheet you actually made - far more memorable than any printed notes

8. Avoid Passive Highlighting

Highlighting feels productive but does almost nothing for retention. Instead:
  • Use a pencil to write "MCQ?" next to facts that feel examinable
  • Put a "?" next to things you did not fully understand
  • These annotations force your brain to evaluate, not just scan

For NEET PG Specifically

  • Read PYQs first for a topic, then read the theory. You already know what the exam wants.
  • After reading, do 5-10 questions on that topic immediately. Testing yourself after reading doubles retention compared to re-reading (this is called the testing effect).
  • Prefer video + reading combo for genuinely weak subjects - dual encoding (audio + visual + text) creates stronger memory traces on first exposure.

The One-Line Summary

The brain retains what it processes actively. Read less per sitting, recall more often, attach clinical meaning to every fact, and test yourself immediately after each topic. That is the entire formula.

I mean since you u say u are more use in medical studies can u teel me how some students consume every data in only one read is there something super humanily possible

Great question - and I'll be straight with you.

Is "One-Read Perfect Retention" Real?

Short answer: Not in the way social media makes it look.
Those toppers who say "I read it once and never forgot" are either:
  1. Not being fully honest - they revised more than they admit
  2. Using techniques that make each read so deep it functions like 3 normal reads
  3. Have a naturally strong working memory - which exists on a spectrum but is not magic
There is no verified human ability to read a page once and retain 100% of it permanently. Even people with hyperthymesia (highly superior autobiographical memory) remember experiences and events, not textbook content.

What IS Real and Documented

Eidetic Memory ("Photographic Memory")

  • Exists in a small percentage of young children, almost never in adults
  • Even in children it fades - it is not permanent storage
  • No medical topper has been confirmed to use this
  • So if someone tells you they have photographic memory - they almost certainly mean something else

What Top Scorers Actually Have

What they claimWhat's really happening
"I read once"They read SLOWLY and deliberately, which encodes deeply
"I never forgot"They tested themselves constantly - questions = invisible revision
"I have a photographic memory"Strong working memory + pattern recognition from volume of practice
"I understood everything instantly"They had prior schema - related knowledge already in place

The Closest Thing to "Superhuman" First-Read Retention

These are real, science-backed phenomena that some people exploit better than others:

1. Schema Building (The Real Secret)

When your brain already has a framework for a topic, new information slots in instantly and sticks.
  • A student who has seen 500 cardiology MCQs reads about a new drug and retains it in one read
  • A beginner reads the same line and forgets it by the next paragraph
  • This is why toppers seem to learn faster - they built schema through years of exposure
What you can do: Before reading any new topic, spend 5 minutes watching a short video or reading a summary. That skeleton makes everything stick faster.

2. Deep Processing vs. Shallow Processing

Psychologist Fergus Craik proved in 1972 that how deeply you process information determines how long you retain it - not how many times you read it.
  • Shallow: "I read that digoxin causes yellow vision"
  • Deep: "Digoxin inhibits Na/K ATPase → increases intracellular Ca → increases contractility → toxicity causes yellow-green vision, bradycardia, arrhythmias → treat with digibind"
The second person retains it in one read. The first person forgets it by tomorrow.

3. High Working Memory Capacity

Some people genuinely hold more in short-term memory and transfer it to long-term memory more efficiently. This is partially genetic. But it can be trained through:
  • Meditation (proven to increase working memory in 8 weeks)
  • Sleep (memory consolidation happens during deep sleep - non-negotiable)
  • Reducing phone/distraction exposure (fragmented attention destroys working memory)

The Honest Truth for Your NEET PG Prep

Those "one-read wonders" you see on YouTube or Instagram toppers - most of them:
  • Read for 6-8 hours of focused, deep reading not casual reading
  • Did thousands of MCQs which act as invisible repetitions
  • Had strong foundations from MBBS itself
You do not need superhuman memory. You need:
  1. Slow, deliberate first reads with self-testing
  2. MCQs immediately after each topic (this IS your second read, disguised)
  3. 7 hours of sleep so your hippocampus consolidates what you learned
  4. Built-up schema from PYQs before you read theory
The gap between a Rank 500 student and a Rank 20,000 student is rarely raw memory. It is almost always quality of processing + volume of MCQ practice.
That gap is fully closeable in 50 days.

Generate a PYQ strategy to build schema before reading theory

Here is a complete, structured PYQ-first schema-building strategy tailored for your 50-day NEET PG prep:

PYQ-First Schema Strategy for NEET PG 2026

The Core Idea

Most students read theory → then do PYQs. You will flip it: PYQs → Mental Map → Theory → PYQs again.
The PYQs do not test you at this stage. They build the skeleton your theory will attach to.

The 4-Step Topic Cycle

Step 1: Raw PYQ Exposure (15-20 min)

Before opening any book or notes for a topic:
  • Pull up all PYQs from that topic (last 10-15 years, NEET PG + AIIMS + DNB)
  • Do NOT attempt to answer them yet
  • Just read through every question and its correct answer like a story
  • Do not read explanations yet - just Q + correct option
What this does: Your brain now knows exactly what the exam has asked repeatedly. It flags these as "important" automatically.
Tools: PrepLadder subject filter, DAMS chapter-wise PYQ booklet, Marrow topic filter

Step 2: Pattern Mapping (10 min)

After reading through PYQs, grab a blank paper and write:
Topic: [e.g. Achalasia Cardia]

Most tested facts:
- LES fails to relax (asked 4x)
- Bird beak on barium (asked 6x)
- Manometry findings (asked 2x)
- Treatment = Heller's myotomy (asked 3x)

Traps I noticed:
- One Q tried to confuse with DES (diffuse esophageal spasm)
- One Q asked about secondary achalasia (Chagas disease)

What I don't know yet:
- Why does LES fail? (pathophysiology)
- What exactly does manometry show?
This page is your schema skeleton. It takes 10 minutes and transforms your upcoming theory read.

Step 3: Targeted Theory Read (30-45 min)

Now open your notes/book for that topic. You are not reading everything - you are filling in the skeleton.
  • Your brain is already primed with the questions
  • When you hit the answer to something you flagged, it locks in immediately
  • You will naturally skip low-yield paragraphs and slow down at high-yield ones
  • Mark anything that answers a PYQ with a small tick in the margin
Reading speed will increase by 30-40% because you are not reading blindly anymore.

Step 4: Active Recall Test (10 min)

Close everything. Open PrepLadder or DAMS and attempt the same PYQs now - timed.
  • Questions you get right: locked in, move on
  • Questions you get wrong: read ONLY that explanation, nothing else
  • Note the wrong ones on your mistake sheet
This fourth step is what converts short-term to long-term memory.

How to Prioritize Which PYQs to Use

Not all years are equal. Use this hierarchy:
SourcePriorityWhy
NEET PG 2020-2024HighestDirect pattern for current exam
AIIMS PG 2018-2022HighConcept-based, builds deep schema
DNB CET 2019-2023HighOften predicts NEET PG trends
NEET PG 2015-2019MediumOlder but foundational repeats
State PG examsLowUse only for Surgery/OBG where you are strong

Subject-Wise PYQ Schema Approach

Medicine (Your biggest opportunity)

  • PYQs cluster hard around: cardiology (ECG cases), nephrology (GN classification), rheumatology (diagnostic criteria), neurology (nerve lesion localization)
  • Do PYQs topic by topic, not as a bulk dump
  • Schema hack: For rheumatology, just read all the diagnostic criteria questions first - you will see the same criteria tested 8-10 times in different disguises

Surgery (Your strength - maintain it)

  • Do a rapid 2-hour PYQ skim of all surgery topics
  • You will find 60-70% of questions cluster in: hernias, thyroid, breast, colorectal, trauma
  • Build schema maps only for topics where you got PYQs wrong in mocks

OBG (Your strength - maintain it)

  • PYQs repeat heavily in: CTG interpretation, Bishop score, MTP act, PCOS criteria, contraception
  • Do a 1.5 hour PYQ sweep to confirm your schema is solid
  • Flag any legal/statutory numbers (MTP gestational limits, PCPNDT act details) - these are pure recall

Pharmacology

  • PYQs are almost entirely mechanism + side effect + drug of choice
  • Build one schema map per drug class: write the class name, the most-tested drug, its MOA in one line, and its classic side effect
  • 80% of Pharma PYQs come from: CVS drugs, antibiotics, CNS drugs, anticancer agents

PSM / Community Medicine

  • Most formula-heavy subject - PYQs will immediately show you which formulas are actually tested
  • Schema map = a table of formulas with the year they were asked
  • Do not memorize every formula - memorize the 12-15 that appear repeatedly

Pathology

  • PYQs cluster in: tumor markers, histological appearances, genetic syndromes, lab findings
  • Schema hack: Group PYQs by "what does the question describe" - you will notice the exam describes the same histology slide 4 different ways

Pediatrics

  • Vaccines + developmental milestones = 40% of PYQ weightage
  • Do vaccine schedule PYQs first - build a simple timeline schema before reading IAP schedule
  • Growth and development questions always test the same 8-10 milestones

Weekly PYQ Schema Schedule (Integrated into Your 50-Day Plan)

DaysSubject PYQ Schema Focus
Day 1-3Medicine - Cardiology + Nephrology
Day 4-6Medicine - Neurology + Rheumatology + Respiratory
Day 7-8Pharmacology full sweep
Day 9-10Pathology full sweep
Day 11-12PSM formula mapping
Day 13-14Pediatrics vaccines + milestones
Day 15-16Microbiology high-yield sweep
Day 17-18Anatomy/Physio - PYQ only, no deep theory
Day 19-20Surgery + OBG - confirm existing schema, patch gaps
Day 21 onwardSchema building done - switch to mock + revision cycle

The Mistake Sheet System (Runs Parallel to All of the Above)

Every time a PYQ surprises you - meaning you would not have gotten it right - write it in your mistake sheet under three columns:
Question gistWhy I got it wrongThe one-line fix
Digoxin toxicity arrhythmia txConfused lignocaine with digibindDigibind = specific antidote for digoxin
Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathyMissed sarcoidosis, chose TBSarcoidosis = bilateral, TB = usually unilateral
By Day 40 this sheet is your single most valuable revision document. It is personalized to exactly where your brain makes errors.

The One Rule That Makes This Work

Never read theory for a topic you have not done PYQs for first.
Even 10 minutes of PYQ exposure before theory is enough to activate schema-building. Without it, you are reading blind. With it, every line of theory is answering a question your brain is already asking.
That is the entire edge.

.Based on recent recent trenda and puqs whatbare the most important topics in each subject that carry around80% weightage as i have heard that 20% matter covers 80% questioj in neet pg

Searching the Web

NEET PG 2024 2025 most important topics subject wise high yield weightage analysis

Reading Web Page

https://www.medexamsprep.com/blog/neet-pg-2025-paper-analysi…

Good data pulled from NEET PG 2025 paper analysis. Here is the complete high-yield map:

The 20% Topics That Cover 80% of NEET PG Questions

Critical Exam Pattern First (NEET PG 2025 confirmed)

  • 50% image-based questions - you must practice image MCQs, not just text
  • 70% clinical vignette-based - pure recall won't work alone
  • ~30% direct PYQ repeats - free marks if you've done PYQs

Subject-Wise High-Yield Topic Map

1. MEDICINE - 15% weightage (30 questions)

Your biggest opportunity. Cover these clusters only:
ClusterMust-Know Topics
CardiologyECG interpretation, heart failure management, infective endocarditis (Duke criteria), ACS protocols, pericarditis
NephrologyGlomerulonephritis patterns (MPGN, IgA, minimal change), nephrotic vs nephritic, CKD staging, RTA types
RheumatologyRA (pannus, anti-CCP), SLE (criteria, lupus nephritis), vasculitis classification, Sjogren's
EndocrinologyAddison's disease, Cushing's, thyroid cancers, MEN syndromes, pheochromocytoma workup
RespiratoryARDS (low tidal volume + high PEEP), TB management, sarcoidosis, pulmonary HTN
NeurologyStroke management, seizure drugs, nerve lesion localization, myasthenia gravis
Infectious diseaseHIV (IRIS, OIs and CD4 counts), malaria treatment, meningitis management
Paget's diseaseBone changes, alkaline phosphatase, complications
Skip: Rare syndromes, detailed GI motility disorders, obscure hematology

2. OBG - 10% weightage (20 questions) - Your strength

These 6 clusters cover nearly everything:
ClusterMust-Know Topics
Labor room emergenciesCord prolapse, shoulder dystocia (McRobert's), atonic PPH (Bakri balloon, uterotonics sequence)
Obstetric complicationsPlacenta previa vs abruption, PIH/eclampsia management, HELLP
Fetal monitoringCTG interpretation, Bishop score, partograph
Gynecological malignanciesCervical (FIGO staging, HPV), ovarian (markers, types), endometrial
Contraception + MTPFailure rates, MTP Act gestational limits, emergency contraception
Infertility + PCOSPCOS Rotterdam criteria, AMH, HSG indications, IVF basics
AUBPALM-COEIN classification, fibroid management

3. SURGERY - 9% weightage (18 questions) - Your strength

High-yield clusters:
ClusterMust-Know Topics
GI SurgeryAchalasia (bird beak, manometry, Heller's), Courvoisier's law, pancreatic cancer, cholangiocarcinoma
ColorectalParks classification (anal fistula), Dukes staging, FAP, Lynch syndrome
ThyroidCancer types (papillary = most common, MTC = calcitonin), Graves surgery
BreastTriple assessment, breast cancer staging, sentinel node biopsy, BRCA
HerniaInguinal anatomy, direct vs indirect, femoral, Spigelian
TraumaDiffuse axonal injury, FAST exam, damage control surgery, fat embolism
HepatobiliaryChild-Pugh score, TIPS, portal HTN management
CongenitalDiaphragmatic hernia (Bochdalek vs Morgagni), pyloric stenosis

4. PSM / COMMUNITY MEDICINE - 8% weightage (16 questions)

ClusterMust-Know Topics
BiostatisticsSensitivity/specificity, PPV/NPV, NNT, types of bias, study designs
National ProgramsRMNCH+A, TB (NTEP/NIKSHAY), NHM, immunization schedule
EpidemiologyAttack rate, herd immunity, R0 values, epidemic types
ScreeningCriteria for screening (Wilson-Jungner), Wilson's criteria
NutritionPEM grading (Wellcome, Gomez, IAP), ICDS, Mid-day meal
DemographyMMR, IMR, NMR - current India figures, census data
2025 trend: Applied epidemiology and program-based MCQs dominate. Calculation questions are minimal now.

5. BIOCHEMISTRY - 7.5% weightage (15 questions)

ClusterMust-Know Topics
Enzyme kineticsKm, Vmax, competitive vs non-competitive inhibition
Metabolic disordersUrea cycle defects, organic acidemias, lysosomal storage disorders
VitaminsDeficiency diseases, fat vs water soluble, coenzyme roles
Molecular biologyPCR, Southern/Northern/Western blot, restriction enzymes
Lipid metabolismLipoprotein disorders, familial hypercholesterolemia
HemoglobinHbA1c, sickling, thalassemia types, oxygen dissociation curve

6. PHARMACOLOGY - 7.5% weightage (15 questions)

ClusterMust-Know Topics
CVS drugsBeta blockers (cardioselectivity), ACE inhibitors (contraindications), digoxin toxicity, antiarrhythmics
AntibioticsMOA of each class, drug of choice for key infections, aminoglycoside toxicity
CNS drugsAntiepileptics (drug of choice per seizure type), antipsychotics (EPS, NMS), antidepressants
AnticancerAlkylating agents, antimetabolites, targeted therapy (imatinib, trastuzumab)
AutonomicCholinergic/anticholinergic effects, adrenergic receptors and drugs
Anesthesia drugsInduction agents, muscle relaxants, reversal agents
Every pharma question is: MOA + classic side effect + drug of choice. That's the template for 90% of questions.

7. PATHOLOGY - 6% weightage (12 questions)

ClusterMust-Know Topics
HematologyAML (M3 = t15;17, PML-RARA), CML (Philadelphia chromosome), lymphoma translocations (t14;18 = follicular)
Tumor markersAFP, CEA, CA-125, PSA, beta-hCG, calcitonin - which cancer, when to use
Liver pathologyPrimary biliary cholangitis (AMA+), hepatocellular carcinoma, Wilson's disease
Cell injuryApoptosis vs necrosis, free radicals, amyloid types
InflammationGranuloma types (caseating vs non-caseating), healing
Renal pathologyGN patterns on EM/IF, nephrotic syndrome causes

8. MICROBIOLOGY - 6% weightage (12 questions)

ClusterMust-Know Topics
MorphologyGram staining patterns of key organisms, capsulated bacteria, spore formers
FungiAspergillus (acute angle septate hyphae), Mucor (right angle), Candida, Cryptococcus
VirologyHIV (CD4 counts + OIs), Herpes family, Hepatitis serology
BacteriologyTB (culture, staining, drug resistance), Staph/Strep virulence factors
ParasitologyMalaria (Plasmodium life cycle, treatment), Kala-azar, Toxoplasma
SterilizationAutoclave vs hot air oven, disinfection levels

9. ANATOMY - 4.5% weightage (9 questions)

ClusterMust-Know Topics
Nerve injuriesRadial (wrist drop), ulnar (claw hand), median (ape thumb), common peroneal (foot drop)
JointsBlood supply of femoral head, rotator cuff muscles
EmbryologyNeural tube defects, DiGeorge (3rd/4th pharyngeal pouch), branchial arch derivatives
Neuro-anatomyCircle of Willis, internal capsule lesions, cerebellar connections
Do PYQs only for anatomy. Deep theory is not worth the time investment.

10. PEDIATRICS - 2.5% weightage (5 questions)

ClusterMust-Know Topics
VaccinesIAP immunization schedule 2024, cold chain, AEFI management
DevelopmentMotor milestones (gross + fine), language, social - exact ages
NeonatalNNJ management (phototherapy thresholds), RDS, birth asphyxia (APGAR)
EmergenciesFebrile seizure management, meningitis empirical treatment, status epilepticus

11. FORENSIC MEDICINE - 3% weightage (6 questions)

ClusterMust-Know Topics
ThanatologyRigor mortis (timing), postmortem lividity, decomposition stages
WoundsIncised vs lacerated vs contused, entrance vs exit gunshot wound
Medico-legalPOCSO act, MLC procedure, dying declaration validity
ToxicologyOrganophosphate poisoning (SLUDGE + treatment), carbon monoxide, alcohol

12. DERMATOLOGY - 4% weightage (8 questions)

ClusterMust-Know Topics
Blistering disordersPemphigus (IgG + desmoglein, Nikolsky +), Bullous pemphigoid (IgG + hemidesmosome)
InfectionsLeprosy (types, WHO treatment regimens), syphilis stages
Skin cancersBCC vs SCC vs melanoma features
Psoriasis/EczemaAuspitz sign, Koebner phenomenon, treatment ladder

Your Personal Priority Matrix

Given your Surgery + OBG strength, here is exactly where to invest your 50 days:
PrioritySubjectTime Investment
🔴 CriticalMedicine25% of study time
🔴 CriticalBiochemistry10% of study time
🟡 ImportantPSM8% of study time
🟡 ImportantPharmacology8% of study time
🟡 ImportantPathology8% of study time
🟡 ImportantMicrobiology7% of study time
🟢 MaintainSurgery10% of study time
🟢 MaintainOBG10% of study time
🟢 Light touchAnatomy/Physio/Forensic/Peds/Derm14% of study time

The One Number to Remember

From NEET PG 2025: Medicine + OBG + Surgery + PSM = 42% of the paper. Master these four and you are more than halfway there before touching any other subject.

I know I am not at xeronbut still 50 days haunt me kike is this enough tym to achieve good rank in neet pg as i have yet to cimplete my first read

This is a mindset question as much as a strategy question. Let me be honest with you.

The Hard Truth First

50 days without completing first read sounds scary. But here is what actually matters:
NEET PG is NOT a test of how many times you read. It is a test of how many questions you can answer correctly on one day.
Those are two very different things.

Why 50 Days Is Genuinely Enough

The Math Works in Your Favor

  • NEET PG has 200 questions
  • The top 20% topics we just mapped cover ~160 of those 200 questions
  • You do NOT need to read everything - you need to read the right things deeply
  • 50 days x 10 hours = 500 hours of study time
500 hours used intelligently is more than most people use in 6 months of distracted studying.

Real Student Data

Every NEET PG topper batch has students who:
  • Started serious prep with 45-60 days left
  • Had not finished first read
  • Still cracked under Rank 500
What they did differently was not read more - they read smarter and did more MCQs.

Why "First Read Incomplete" is NOT the Problem You Think It Is

Here is the uncomfortable reality:
A complete first read with poor retention = worse than an incomplete read with deep retention of what you covered.
The brain does not give marks for pages turned. It gives marks for information it can retrieve under pressure.
A student who has deeply processed 60% of the syllabus will outscore a student who has lightly read 100% of it. Every time.

What "Not at Zero" Actually Means

You said you are not at zero. That means:
  • You have MBBS knowledge as a base (6 years of exposure)
  • Surgery and OBG are already strong
  • You have some foundation in most subjects
That baseline is worth more than you are giving it credit for. Your brain has schema from MBBS even if it feels rusty. PYQs will activate it fast.

The Anxiety Is the Real Enemy Right Now

The haunting feeling you described - "is this enough time" - does one specific thing:
It makes you re-read the same things instead of moving forward. It makes you feel like you need to be perfect before attempting questions. It keeps you in preparation mode instead of performance mode.
The students who crack NEET PG in 50 days are not smarter. They are less afraid of moving forward with incomplete knowledge.

What You Should Do Starting Tonight

Stop thinking about the full syllabus. Ask only one question each morning:
"What is the highest-yield thing I can do in the next 3 hours?"
Concretely, from tomorrow:
  1. Pick one subject from the high-yield map
  2. Do PYQs first for the top 2-3 clusters in that subject (30 min)
  3. Read only those clusters in your notes (2 hours)
  4. Do 20 MCQs on what you just read (30 min)
  5. Repeat with next subject
That is one productive block. Do 2-3 blocks per day. In 20 days you will have covered the high-yield core of every subject.
You will feel more prepared after 7 days of this than after months of anxious, incomplete reading.

The One Reframe That Changes Everything

Stop measuring progress by "how much have I read."
Start measuring by "how many questions can I now answer that I couldn't yesterday."
That shift alone - from coverage mindset to performance mindset - is what separates Rank 500 students from Rank 20,000 students. Not intelligence. Not time. Mindset and method.
50 days is enough. Start tonight.

Is core btr enough ?

Not Dams i mean zainab vora core btr

Searching the Web

Zainab Vora Core BTR NEET PG review is it enough for rank

Good - I have enough to give you an honest answer.

Is Core BTR (Dr. Zainab Vora) Enough for NEET PG?

What Core BTR Actually Is

It is a 19-subject high-yield revision platform built on the "Believe, Trust, Revise" framework. Dr. Zainab Vora designed it specifically for NEET PG / INI-CET aspirants who want a focused, exam-pattern-oriented revision rather than reading full textbooks.
It covers:
  • High-yield concept videos
  • PYQ-tagged question banks
  • Custom revision modules
  • Grand tests
  • ZEV-recommended topic tags

The Honest Answer: Yes, BUT With One Condition

From the Reddit community and even Zainab herself:
"BTR is enough - IF your conceptual understanding of subjects is sound beforehand."
That condition matters a lot for your situation.

What Core BTR Does WELL

StrengthWhy It Helps You
High-yield filteringAlready does the 20/80 work for you
PYQ integrationQuestions tagged to exam relevance
Revision-focusedDesigned for last-phase prep - fits your 50-day window perfectly
Clinical vignette styleMatches current NEET PG pattern (70% clinical)
Image-based Q practice50% of NEET PG 2025 was image-based
Zainab's teaching styleKnown for making concepts stick fast

What Core BTR Does NOT Replace

GapWhat You Still Need
First-read foundationBTR is a revision tool, not a first-read tool. If a topic is completely new to you, BTR alone won't build understanding from scratch
Deep clinical reasoningFor Medicine especially, you need some base before BTR clicks
Grand test practiceBTR has GTs but supplement with DAMS/PrepLadder full mocks for rank simulation

For YOUR Specific Situation (50 days, first read incomplete)

Here is the practical call:
Use Core BTR as your PRIMARY source - but use it as a first + revision hybrid, not just revision.
Here is how:
  1. Watch BTR video for a topic - this becomes your first read (faster than reading a book)
  2. Do BTR PYQs immediately after
  3. Make your one-line cheat note per topic
  4. Use full-length grand tests from any platform to simulate rank
The reason this works: BTR's content is already filtered to high-yield. For 50 days with an incomplete first read, reading full textbooks is the wrong move anyway. BTR's concise videos are arguably better than a full first read at this stage.

Bottom Line

If you haveVerdict
Strong MBBS base + incomplete revisionBTR alone = sufficient for a good rank
Weak conceptual base in a subjectBTR for high-yield + watch one concept lecture for very weak topics
Your profile (Surgery/OBG strong, Medicine weak)BTR for all subjects, supplement Medicine with one good concept source (PrepLadder Medicine or Mudit Khanna)
Core BTR + disciplined PYQ practice + 2 grand tests/week = a realistic path to sub-1000 rank in 50 days.
You have the right tool. Now just use it consistently.

Suppose i gave you one pyq how can you make that topic stock to my memory ?

Yes, absolutely. This is exactly where I'm most useful to you.
Give me any PYQ - paste the question and options - and I will:
  1. Explain the answer with the exact mechanism, not just "because that's the answer"
  2. Build the full topic map around that one question - what else the exam can ask from the same concept
  3. Give you a clinical hook - a patient scenario that makes the fact unforgettable
  4. Create a memory anchor - mnemonic, pattern, or visual association specific to that fact
  5. Show you the trap - what the wrong options were trying to make you pick and why
  6. Give you 2-3 related PYQ patterns from the same topic so you recognize the concept in any disguise

The goal is that after I'm done, you don't just know the answer to that question - you own the entire topic around it and can answer 5 variations you've never seen before.
Paste your PYQ and let's go.
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