You know, the most conservative way would be to memorize them...BrS wrote:lol thanks guys! really wanted to make sure that i'm using my space on my cheat sheet in the most conservative way possible
![Razz :P](./images/smilies/icon_razz.gif)
You know, the most conservative way would be to memorize them...BrS wrote:lol thanks guys! really wanted to make sure that i'm using my space on my cheat sheet in the most conservative way possible
^yes. But honestly the whole thing takes up less than 15% of one side of a sheet of paper at 4 pt font; if you want to shrink it to 2 pt, it's ~4%.sciolyFTW_aku wrote:You know, the most conservative way would be to memorize them...BrS wrote:lol thanks guys! really wanted to make sure that i'm using my space on my cheat sheet in the most conservative way possible
lol i was just jokingUnome wrote:^yes. But honestly the whole thing takes up less than 15% of one side of a sheet of paper at 4 pt font; if you want to shrink it to 2 pt, it's ~4%.sciolyFTW_aku wrote:You know, the most conservative way would be to memorize them...BrS wrote:lol thanks guys! really wanted to make sure that i'm using my space on my cheat sheet in the most conservative way possible
Honestly, the most times I've been asked about origins/insertion on a test is ONEsciolyFTW_aku wrote: lol i was just joking
They contribute to proprioception. Search up intrafusal fibers and start from there.-ISO13- wrote:Could someone breifly explain the national level muscular topics? Thanks
There are usually 2-4 diagrams. Common ones are skin, long bone, major bones, and muscle cross sections. Less common are major muscles and vertebrae.BrS wrote:How many diagram questions should i expect? So far, I have taken up 3/4 of my cheat sheet with diagrams. SOS help...
just gonna repost this questionalexamezaga1 wrote:For skeletal national level, they say spinal fractures, are they just referring to compression fractures? Because I thought that was included in the "fractures" section of regional/state level comp.
Yeah, compression fractures are going to definitely be the most likely ones to show up. This wikipedia page also mentions some others: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinal_fracturealexamezaga1 wrote:just gonna repost this questionalexamezaga1 wrote:For skeletal national level, they say spinal fractures, are they just referring to compression fractures? Because I thought that was included in the "fractures" section of regional/state level comp.
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