Episodios

  • Acute Pancreatitis quick shots NEET PG , FMGE
    Sep 26 2025

    🎙 Dr. StemCell Podcast

    Episode Title: Acute Pancreatitis — High-Yield NEET PG Quick Shot


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    📘 Podcast Description:


    In this high-yield NEET PG episode, Dr. StemCell breaks down Acute Pancreatitis—a classic PYQ magnet. From scoring systems to enzyme markers, this 4-minute blitz gives you everything you need to ace the topic. Learn how to spot the clinical clues, avoid common traps, and master the treatment algorithm.


    What You’ll Learn:

    - Most common cause: Gallstones > Alcohol

    - Key diagnostic markers: Serum lipase > amylase

    - Scoring systems: Ranson’s, BISAP

    - Imaging: CT scan after 72 hrs if diagnosis unclear

    - Treatment: Supportive care, fluids, NPO, pain control


    Mnemonic Mastery:

    “GET SMASHED” for causes

    “PANCREAS” for Ranson’s criteria


    🎯 NEET PG Motto:

    "Every PYQ is a blueprint. This podcast turns past questions into future victories."






    #NEETPG #NEETPG2026 #NEETPGPreparation #NEETPGExam #NEETPGSyllabus #NEETPGStudyPlan #NEETPGCoaching #NEETPGTopperTips #HowToCrackNEETPG #NEETPGQuestionPaper #NEETPGMockTest #NEETPGStrategy #NEETPGTips #NEETPGPreviousYearQuestions #NEETPGOnlineCoaching #NEETPGDailyRoutine #NEETPGNotes #NEETPGImportantTopics #NEETPGStudyMaterial #NEETPGExamPattern #BestBooksForNEETPG #MBBS #MedicalStudents #MedicalEducation #MedSchool #MedStudy #Anatomy #Physiology #Biochemistry #Pathology #Pharmacology #Microbiology #Medicine #Surgery #OBGYN #Pediatrics #Radiology #Orthopedics #Dermatology #Psychiatry #Anesthesia #ENT #Ophthalmology #EmergencyMedicine #CommunityMedicine #INICET #FMGE #AIIMS #JIPMER #PGEntrance #MedicalEntrance

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    6 m
  • HYPONATREMIA QUICKSHOT NEET PG , FMGE
    Sep 26 2025

    Dr. StemCell Podcast

    Episode Title: Hyponatremia — High-Yield NEET PG Quick Shot


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    📘 Podcast Description:


    In this crisp 4-minute episode, Dr. StemCell dives into Hyponatremia — a deceptively simple topic that’s a PYQ favorite in NEET PG. Learn how to decode symptoms, spot key lab clues, and master the emergency treatment protocols. With mnemonics, clinical pearls, and exam hacks, this episode is your shortcut to scoring high and saving lives.


    What You’ll Learn:

    - Types of Hyponatremia: Hypovolemic, Euvolemic, Hypervolemic

    - Key causes: SIADH, diuretics, heart failure

    - Danger signs: Seizures, altered sensorium

    - Treatment essentials: Hypertonic saline, fluid restriction

    - Mnemonic mastery: “SHOCKED” for severe signs


    🎯 NEET PG Motto:

    "PYQs aren’t just questions — they’re clues to what matters most. Every episode of Dr. StemCell Podcast is designed to turn past questions into future marks."




    #NEETPG #NEETPG2026 #NEETPGPreparation #NEETPGExam #NEETPGSyllabus #NEETPGStudyPlan #NEETPGCoaching #NEETPGTopperTips #HowToCrackNEETPG #NEETPGQuestionPaper #NEETPGMockTest #NEETPGStrategy #NEETPGTips #NEETPGPreviousYearQuestions #NEETPGOnlineCoaching #NEETPGDailyRoutine #NEETPGNotes #NEETPGImportantTopics #NEETPGStudyMaterial #NEETPGExamPattern #BestBooksForNEETPG #MBBS #MedicalStudents #MedicalEducation #MedSchool #MedStudy #Anatomy #Physiology #Biochemistry #Pathology #Pharmacology #Microbiology #Medicine #Surgery #OBGYN #Pediatrics #Radiology #Orthopedics #Dermatology #Psychiatry #Anesthesia #ENT #Ophthalmology #EmergencyMedicine #CommunityMedicine #INICET #FMGE #AIIMS #JIPMER #PGEntrance #MedicalEntrance

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    8 m
  • HYPERKALEMIA PYQ SHOTS NEET PG , FMGE
    Sep 26 2025

    🎧 Episode Title: Hyperkalemia — High-Yield NEET PG Quick Shot


    Description:


    In this rapid-fire NEET PG prep episode, Dr. StemCell breaks down Hyperkalemia — a small topic with massive exam impact. Learn the must-know ECG changes, emergency treatments, and high-yield mnemonics like TWNS and C BIG K DROP. Avoid common mistakes, master the clinical clues, and lock in your marks with this 4-minute power-packed review.


    Key Takeaways:

    - ECG signs: Tall T, Wide QRS, No P, Sine waves

    - First-line emergency: IV Calcium gluconate

    - Mnemonic mastery: C BIG K DROP for treatment steps


    Subscribe and follow Dr. StemCell on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Instagram, and more. Study smart, stay sharp!


    #NEETPG #NEETPG2026 #NEETPGPreparation #NEETPGExam #NEETPGSyllabus #NEETPGStudyPlan #NEETPGCoaching #NEETPGTopperTips #HowToCrackNEETPG #NEETPGQuestionPaper #NEETPGMockTest #NEETPGStrategy #NEETPGTips #NEETPGPreviousYearQuestions #NEETPGOnlineCoaching #NEETPGDailyRoutine #NEETPGNotes #NEETPGImportantTopics #NEETPGStudyMaterial #NEETPGExamPattern #BestBooksForNEETPG #MBBS #MedicalStudents #MedicalEducation #MedSchool #MedStudy #Anatomy #Physiology #Biochemistry #Pathology #Pharmacology #Microbiology #Medicine #Surgery #OBGYN #Pediatrics #Radiology #Orthopedics #Dermatology #Psychiatry #Anesthesia #ENT #Ophthalmology #EmergencyMedicine #CommunityMedicine #INICET #FMGE #AIIMS #JIPMER #PGEntrance #MedicalEntrance


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    8 m
  • NEET PG PYQS QUICK SHOTS
    Sep 23 2025

    Dr. Stem Cell Podcast Episode is Ready!


    I've created a comprehensive NEET PG preparation podcast episode that includes:


    📚 Content Covered:

    Cardiovascular Physiology - Frank-Starling mechanism with

    1. ​MCQRespiratory Physiology - Oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve with practice Question
    2. ​pharmacology - Beta-blockers classification and Contraindications
    3. ​ anatomy - Cranial nerves (facial nerve focus)
    4. ​Pathology - Neoplasia vs. Hyperplasia Concepts 5.current Year Trends - 2025 exam pattern Insights
    5. ​ study Strategy - Expert preparation tips






























    #NEETPG #NEETPG2026 #NEETPGPreparation #NEETPGExam #NEETPGSyllabus #NEETPGStudyPlan #NEETPGCoaching #NEETPGTopperTips #HowToCrackNEETPG #NEETPGQuestionPaper #NEETPGMockTest #NEETPGStrategy #NEETPGTips #NEETPGPreviousYearQuestions #NEETPGOnlineCoaching #NEETPGDailyRoutine #NEETPGNotes #NEETPGImportantTopics #NEETPGStudyMaterial #NEETPGExamPattern #BestBooksForNEETPG #MBBS #MedicalStudents #MedicalEducation #MedSchool #MedStudy #Anatomy #Physiology #Biochemistry #Pathology #Pharmacology #Microbiology #Medicine #Surgery #OBGYN #Pediatrics #Radiology #Orthopedics #Dermatology #Psychiatry #Anesthesia #ENT #Ophthalmology #EmergencyMedicine #CommunityMedicine #INICET #FMGE #AIIMS #JIPMER #PGEntrance #MedicalEntrance



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  • Hyponatremia — From Sodium to Safe Corrections
    Sep 22 2025

    Welcome back to NEET PG 2026 Rapid Round. Today, we dive into hyponatremia — a crucial emergency topic frequently tested in previous years. We’ll cover how to quickly triage, spot causes, and safely correct sodium levels, while avoiding common exam traps.

    First, confirm true hypotonic hyponatremia by checking serum osmolality. Remember, hypotonic means osmolality under 275 mOsm/kg. Rule out pseudohyponatremia caused by things like high lipids or proteins, and translocational hyponatremia from hyperglycemia.

    Next, assess symptom severity. Severe signs include seizures, coma, or brain herniation threats. Moderate symptoms might be vomiting, confusion, or severe headache. Mild or no symptoms need less aggressive management.

    To pinpoint the underlying cause, check the patient’s volume status. Hypovolemia often comes from vomiting or diuretics. Euvolemia can suggest SIADH, hypothyroidism, or adrenal insufficiency. Hypervolemia points to heart failure, liver disease, or nephrotic syndrome.

    Treatment depends on these findings. Severe symptoms get quick 3% hypertonic saline boluses to raise sodium safely by 4 to 6 mEq/L initially. Hypovolemic cases respond to isotonic saline. SIADH takes fluid restriction and sometimes salt or loop diuretics. Hypervolemic states need fluid and salt restriction plus diuretics.

    Know these key numbers—never exceed an 8 to 10 mEq/L sodium rise in 24 hours to avoid osmotic demyelination syndrome. Many sources suggest aiming for 4 to 6 mEq/L first day for chronic cases.

    Let’s test this with some rapid MCQs.

    Question one: A 65-year-old on thiazides has confusion with sodium 112, low osmolality, and urine sodium 50. What’s the best first step?

    The correct answer: give a 3% sodium chloride bolus to quickly correct the severe symptomatic hyponatremia before addressing diuretics.

    Question two: A young adult with pneumonia has sodium 122, euvolemic, concentrated urine with high sodium. Best next step?

    Fluid restriction is the right move for SIADH here, not saline infusion, which may worsen dilution.

    Question three: What combination increases osmotic demyelination risk?

    The answer: chronic low sodium plus malnutrition and correction faster than 10 mEq/L in 24 hours.

    If sodium rises too fast, the safest fix is to start D5W and desmopressin to slow down correction and prevent brain damage.

    One more: Hyperglycemia with sodium 124 and glucose 600 mg/dL. True or false: This is pseudohyponatremia and needs no correction?

    Actually, the sodium needs correcting upward for glucose level before treating sodium abnormalities.

    Why use 3% saline boluses in emergencies? Boluses act quickly and can be precisely titrated to the needed 4–6 mEq/L rise without overshooting.

    Why avoid normal saline in SIADH? Because kidneys keep the sodium and retain water, worsening hyponatremia with saline.

    In persistent euvolemia, always check thyroid and adrenal function before diagnosing SIADH.

    Remember potassium too — low potassium correction can raise sodium and cause overcorrection risk.

    To wrap up, here’s a quick case: A middle-aged man with lung cancer develops confusion and hyponatremia with high urine sodium and osmolality indicating SIADH. Mild symptoms call for fluid restriction and salt tablets, while severe symptoms deserve 3% saline boluses.

    The take-home mantra: Hypotonic first, check volume next; bolus when bad; 4–6 initial correction; never over 8–10; use desmopressin if sodium rises too fast.

    That’s all for today’s session on hyponatremia. Stay sharp, stay safe, and control those corrections! Next episode, we’ll quickly cover hyperkalemia ECG patterns and emergency management.

    Thank you for listening!


    #NEETPG #NEETPG2026 #NEETPGPreparation #NEETPGExam #NEETPGSyllabus #NEETPGStudyPlan #NEETPGCoaching #NEETPGTopperTips #HowToCrackNEETPG #NEETPGQuestionPaper #NEETPGMockTest #NEETPGStrategy #NEETPGTips #NEETPGPreviousYearQuestions #NEETPGOnlineCoaching #NEETPGDailyRoutine #NEETPGNotes #NEETPGImportantTopics #NEETPGStudyMaterial

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  • RICKETS NEET PG FMGE
    Sep 21 2025

    🎙


    Episode Title:

    🔑 Pediatric Rickets Simplified — Types, Features, Mnemonics & PYQs


    Episode Description (for Spotify):

    Rickets keeps coming back in NEET-PG & INI-CET — both in short stems and clinical vignettes. In this episode, we break it down into bite-sized, exam-friendly pearls with easy mnemonics:


    📌 What You’ll Learn:

    1. ​ Definition & Basics


    • ​ Rickets = defective mineralization of growth plate (children).
    • ​ Osteomalacia = defective mineralization of osteoid (adults).


    1. ​ Types of Rickets


    • ​ Nutritional (Vit D deficiency) → most common.
    • ​ Vitamin D–dependent (Type I & II)
    • ​ Vitamin D–resistant (Hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets)
    • ​ Renal rickets (CKD, renal tubular acidosis).


    1. ​ Clinical Features (Mnemonic: RICKETS)


    • ​ Rosary (rachitic rosary at costochondral junction)
    • ​ Inward bowing of legs (genu varum/valgum)
    • ​ Craniotabes + delayed closure of fontanelle
    • ​ Kyphoscoliosis & knock knees
    • ​ Epiphyseal widening + cupping/fraying of metaphysis
    • ​ Tetany (hypocalcemia)
    • ​ Stomach protrusion (potbelly, Harrison’s sulcus)


    1. ​ Radiology Mnemonic: WFR


    • ​ Widened growth plates
    • ​ Fraying of metaphysis
    • ​ Rachitic rosary


    1. ​ Important Lab Patterns


    • ​ Nutritional Rickets: ↓Ca, ↓PO₄, ↑ALP, ↑PTH
    • ​ Vit D–dependent I: ↓1α-hydroxylase → low calcitriol
    • ​ Vit D–dependent II: End-organ resistance → high calcitriol
    • ​ Hypophosphatemic: Low phosphate, normal calcium


    1. ​ Memory Pegs for Types:


    • ​ Type I: Hydroxylase defect — think “I can’t Hydroxylate.”
    • ​ Type II: Receptor defect — think “II = Resistant.”


    1. ​ PYQ Connections


    • ​ NEET-PG 2021: child with frontal bossing + rachitic rosary → diagnosis?
    • ​ INI-CET 2022: lab values with low phosphate, normal calcium → hypophosphatemic rickets.
    • ​ NEET-PG 2018: child with multiple fractures, vit D supplementation not working → Vit D-dependent Type II.


    🧠 Key Takeaway:


    “One table (Ca, PO₄, ALP, PTH) + one mnemonic (RICKETS) = 3–4 sure-shot questions.”


    👉 Share this with your study group — one episode can fetch you multiple marks!

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    8 m
  • NEURO QUICK SHOTS 2 NEET PG 2024 shift 2
    Sep 18 2025

    🎙️ Dr. Robbins Rascals NeuroQuickReels

    Follow & subscribe on Instagram @Dr.RobbinsRascals

    MCQ 1

    “A 25-year-old has loss of pain/temp on the left from T6 down; fine touch intact. Lesion is?”

    A. Left dorsal column T6

    B. Right lateral spinothalamic T6

    C. Left anterior spinothalamic T6

    D. Right dorsal horn T6

    Answer: B. Right lateral spinothalamic T6

    Pitfall: Don’t swap sides—spinothalamic crosses early, dorsal columns cross in medulla.

    MCQ 2

    “In early syringomyelia, the first sensory deficit is:”

    A. Ipsilateral vibration below lesion

    B. Bilateral cape-like loss of pain/temp

    C. Contralateral crude touch below lesion

    D. Ipsilateral fine touch at lesion level

    Answer: B. Bilateral cape-like loss of pain/temp

    Pitfall: Avoid confusing segmental motor signs with initial sensory dissociation.

    🔔 Don’t miss more NEET PG nuggets—listen on Spotify and follow @Dr.RobbinsRascals!

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  • NEURO QUICK SHOTS NEET PG 2024 SHIFT 2
    Sep 18 2025

    Segment 1: Question & Answer Deep Dive

    Q1 (NEET PG 2024, Shift 2):

    “A 30-year-old male presents with burning pain and temperature loss on the right side of his body below T8. Proprioception and fine touch are intact. Where is the lesion located?”

    A. Left dorsal column at T8

    B. Left lateral spinothalamic tract at T8

    C. Right lateral spinothalamic tract at T8

    D. Right dorsal horn at T8

    Answer: B. Left lateral spinothalamic tract at T8

    Explanation:Pain and temperature fibers cross within one or two segments of entry, so a right‐sided sensory loss below T8 indicates a lesion of the contralateral lateral spinothalamic tract. Proprioception spared because dorsal columns ascend ipsilaterally.

    Pitfall to Avoid: Don’t reverse sides! Always map decussation: spinothalamic crosses early; dorsal columns cross in the medulla.


    Q2 (NEET PG 2023):

    “In syringomyelia, the most characteristic sensory loss pattern is:”

    A. Ipsilateral loss of pain and temperature in a cape-like distribution

    B. Ipsilateral loss of fine touch and vibration below lesion

    C. Contralateral loss of pain and temperature below lesion

    D. Ipsilateral LMN signs at level of lesion

    Answer: A. Ipsilateral loss of pain and temperature in a cape-like distribution

    Explanation:

    Central canal expansion disrupts decussating spinothalamic fibers at that

    segment, producing a bilateral “cape-like” loss over shoulders and arms. Motor signs may appear later but not the initial finding.

    Pitfall to Avoid: Don’t confuse segmental LMN signs (ventral horn) with early sensory deficits—PYQs focus on sensory dissociation first.


    Segment 2: Rollouts & Dangers

    When tackling spinothalamic MCQs, remember:

    1. Rollout Strategy:

    Identify modality (pain/temp vs. touch/pressure).

    Locate decussation (spinal cord vs. medulla).

    Map side of deficit to lesion side (same for touch, opposite for pain).

    2. Common Dangers:

    Option Overlap: Distractors often mix up tract names (anterior vs.

    lateral).

    Level Traps: Lesions above T6 but deficits described below T6 – always

    check dermatome maps!

    Symmetry Tricks: Questions may phrase bilateral vs. unilateral—watch

    adjectives like “cape-like” or “stocking-glove.”


    Segment 3: Rapid-Fire MCQ Drill

    I’ll read five true/false statements—say “true” or “false” out loud!

    1. Lateral spinothalamic tract carries crude touch.

    2. Pain and temperature cross at the anterior white commissure.

    3. Anterolateral system = spinothalamic + spinoreticular tracts.

    4. Syringomyelia first affects lower limb pain sensation.

    5. Fine touch decussates in the brainstem.

    Ready? Pause the podcast, decide, then play back for answers…

    [3-second pause]

    1 False (crude touch = anterior spinothalamic)

    2 True

    3 True

    4 False (cape-like upper trunk)

    5 True

    Segment 4: Mnemonic Corner

    Mnemonic:

    “Love Pain Today”

    Lateral = Pain/Temp

    Anterior = Touch

    Repeat it when you see “spinothalamic” in an MCQ option!

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