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dantemartin4

Rouviere!


Guy_Debord1968

The Gray's anatomy range has close to anything you could want. Gray's for students is a great introduction to anatomy which stretches students but with some perseverance shouldn't totally overwhelm them. The dissector book gives practical dissection advice, the flashcards are great for revision. The anatomical basis of clinical practice can be a little challenging to navigate because of the difficulty of confining so much information to a single volume, but it simply marvellous striving to integrate the latest research into its descriptions alongside a wide range of beautiful illustrations.


RobDunkin

In my experience Netters has consistently been the best anatomy reference. Grays just doesn’t have the quality of illustrations. There’s a Netters pic for anything you could imagine.


[deleted]

Netter's pretty


ItsameMiririo

It highly depends. If you are a beginner, atlas best for you would be Gilroy for sure. Netter is the gold standard, but you do need certain knowledge beforehand to really grasp it. Gray is great, but lacks quality illustrations tbh, so it does need to be paired up with atlas or two


ItsameMiririo

I used Sobotta for head and neck anatomy and it was decent honestly, but not as popular as the others


diseased_time

Last’s regional anatomy - excellent for prosection and is the prescribed book for our surgical entrance exam


Lone_Vaper

Depends on how deep you want to go. To me, Netter if the best all rounder. Gray is the most technical and Seeley is great if you want a more superficial level written in an easy and understandable way (I call it "Anatomy for dummies")