Reddit mentions: The best pathophysiology books

We found 44 Reddit comments discussing the best pathophysiology books. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 16 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

1. Physiology: with STUDENT CONSULT Online Access (Costanzo Physiology)

Physiology: with STUDENT CONSULT Online Access (Costanzo Physiology)
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2. Clinical Pathophysiology Made Ridiculously Simple

Medmaster
Clinical Pathophysiology Made Ridiculously Simple
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3. Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine 7/E (Lange Medical Books)

McGraw-Hill Medical
Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine 7/E (Lange Medical Books)
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4. Physiology

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Physiology
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5. Essentials of Pathophysiology: Concepts of Altered Health States

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Essentials of Pathophysiology: Concepts of Altered Health States
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6. Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease (Robbins Pathology)

W.B. Saunders Company
Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease (Robbins Pathology)
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7. Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology (Guyton Physiology)

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Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology (Guyton Physiology)
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9. Robbins and Cotran Review of Pathology, 3rd Edition

textbookreviewquestionsanswers3rd edition
Robbins and Cotran Review of Pathology, 3rd Edition
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11. Clinical Pathology Board Review

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Clinical Pathology Board Review
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12. Pocket Companion to Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease, 8th Edition

Pocket Companion to Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease, 8th Edition
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14. Textbook of Medical Physiology

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Textbook of Medical Physiology
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15. Understanding Pathophysiology (Huether, Understanding Pathophysiology)

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Understanding Pathophysiology (Huether, Understanding Pathophysiology)
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🎓 Reddit experts on pathophysiology books

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where pathophysiology books are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
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Top Reddit comments about Pathophysiology:

u/CWMD · 3 pointsr/medicine

I would avoid test-prep books then-- those tend to skim the surface of things like pathophys and always seem to be more focused on important facts and associations, etc., and not on the science.

Sadly there is no quick answer for getting better at pathophys (it takes 2 years to cover the basics in med school). Working in an ED you don't have massive amounts of time to read either. As a resident I find myself wanting to review stuff all the time but am pretty busy too, so with that in mind, my recommendations would be:

-UpToDate/Dynamed/Medscape/etc. usually have nice sections in their articles on the pathophysiology of various conditions. The temptation is to skip to the "diagnosis" or "management" sections but there is usually some good stuff in those articles that you can read on the fly

-For critical illness and general physiology, The ICU Book is great and not too dry a read. If you want much more in depth stuff on medical conditions, Harrison's Internal Medicine is a great resource but reads like a phonebook sometimes. If you care about the microscopic level, Robbins & Cotran is basically all the pathology for the non-pathologist you will ever need- can also be a bit dry at times too.

-Look up the mechanism of action of meds you don't know about (Micromedex smart phone app is great for that)

-When you consult someone because you are unsure about something, ask them about what is going on (subspecialists are usually not shy about dropping knowledge if you ask for it); it may also help prevent future un-needed consults which they appreciate

Hope this helps.

u/[deleted] · 1 pointr/StudentNurse

We used this textbook in my pathophysiology class and I found it to be extremely helpful, although it did tend to go more in-depth than what was required for the course in regards to some concepts (but hey, knowledge is power, right? haha). To be honest, I found pathophysiology to be a breeze because I had a very strong A&P background and most of the class coincided with my former A&P II class. You might want to brush up a bit on your body systems before the class starts as a refresher, but I've found that patho often fills in some of the gaps you missed in A&P initially.

One of the things that was most helpful for both me and other students was to create a page with a concept map for every disease like this. It was something our professors strongly encouraged and really helped to break down some of the more complex diseases, especially come time for finals.

Sometimes reading the wikipedia article for some diseases helped when the textbook became too overwhelming. If I didn't fully understand something in the textbook, I'd use alternative resources online to get a better picture.

It sounds like you're very prepared and driven, so I wouldn't stress out too much! Just make sure you do your readings and study, study, study. Definitely learn your lab values and pH shifts (metabolic/respiratory alkalosis/acidosis), you'll be thankful later on if you do. :)

u/self-reliance · 3 pointsr/prephysicianassistant

I strongly recommend that you take some time to travel and enjoy yourself.
No matter what you do to prepare, you are going to be studying and working constantly. Every day will be a constant stream of new knowledge, to the point where anything you study beforehand about, say, EKG's, will need to be pushed out of your mind for starting two months of intensely focusing on the kidney or liver.
I was a kinesiology major focusing heavily on anatomy and physiology. I've worked in physical therapy, an ENT clinic as a scribe, shadowed, etc before school. Despite my history, I still had to re-learn everything in fields that I thought I knew according to the way I would be tested on it or for the boards. This is especially true concerning medications, your Pharmacology or Clin Med courses will tell you what you use to treat a disorder first line, no matter what you've seen in practice.

With that said, if you really are itching to read or prep, I suggest reading Pathophysiology Made Ridiculously Simple which is a great overview of all the components of physiology along with clever ways to remember them. This is a great reference to use during school.
You can also look through medical terminology, many programs will have you "test out" of this at the beginning to continue or it will help you to more quickly identify the disorders etc. in your lectures.

It never hurts to brush up on anatomy, this will be one of your more overwhelming courses content-wise.
good luck!

u/embrace_logic · 1 pointr/diabetes

Lange Pathophysiology of Disease (http://www.amazon.com/Pathophysiology-Disease-Introduction-Clinical-Medicine/dp/0071806008/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1462138694&sr=1-1&keywords=lange+pathophysiology)-- EDIT: Has a good section on diabetes but is also expensive with a ton of additional diseases. I can try to take some pictures of the diabetes section if youd like.

This is a good youtube video on the different classes of medication:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IMLVbEzM0DI

The basics come down to Type I is autoimmune: your body has created antibodies for the beta cells in the pancreas, the cells that produce insulin, which tags the cells for destruction by the immune system.
Type II: Caused by decrease insulin secretion and insulin resistance; meaning that the insulin produced by the pancreas does not stimulate cells to take up glucose. Central adipose tissue (belly fat) promotes the insulin resistance (a number of cytokines and other factors are released, I can give more info if you want). Interestingly, Type II has a stronger genetic component than Type I.

Let me know if you have any other questions. This is really basic but I think gives a good general idea of what is going on.

u/Joshua_Naterman · 2 pointsr/medicalschoolanki

Costanzo is really what you need.

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It is a pretty easy read, and it gives excellent well-rounded basic science in a fairly easy-to-digest format.

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If you want a second companion book, I would get "Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine" published by Lange, authors Gary D. Hammer and Stephen J. Mcphee. It is excellent, high yield for boards, and a great integration.

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I own it, and it's one of the few books I actually used regularly besides Constanzo and Pathoma. The few bad ratings are typically from nurses, which makes sense... this isn't written for nursing students or NPs, it's written for MDs. The extra basic science knowledge we have (are supposed to have, anyways) makes the difference IMO.


Seriously, it's a great buy. The new edition comes out in 2 weeks, not sure if there are any major changes. I have the 7e, which is 56 bucks now vs the 86 for the new edition.

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THis would be an excellent book to develop an Anki deck around IMO.

u/Ansel_Adams · 2 pointsr/medicalschool

Everyone basically just goes through the lecture slides +/- random Googling and UpToDate. (Maybe looking at the odd textbook if something is suggested, but usually they're more "reference" books and not great "teaching" books.)

I really wish I had come across this sub sooner (like M1) because having recommendations like Costanzo (physiology), How the Immune System Works, as well as the usual Pathoma, B&B, etc. would have been amazing to supplement lectures that weren't so great.

In terms of what we're really missing out on though, I think the single most useful thing is probably QBanks. It's hard to walk into exams without ever having had practice questions to do before so depending on your goals (like if you want to write Step or not) UWorld / Rx / Kaplan might be something to consider.

I used Anki on and off, but it was honestly really difficult to pick out what details we'd actually be tested on based on our lecture material so it wasn't always a great use of time.

u/5hade · 4 pointsr/IWantToLearn

I'm an MD in emergency medicine. Here is a broad list of things to choose from since your post is somewhat vague and I don't know your educational background from general public education (top of list) down to ultra detailed pathology textbooks and texts designed for specific specialties (which is like 12-16 years after high school)....

If you can give me an idea if any of this is near what you're looking for, I can expand that area x 10 easily. Off the top of my head:

1)There is a group who has created what is essentially some of the first medical podcasts and has grown into a massive platform. The original creator has since created a fairly casual podcast called "this won't hurt a bit" - it's an "edutainment" podcast around medical stuff.

http://www.wonthurtabit.com/season-one

2) This is a human physiology textbook (but kind of applies to animals as well), it's basically like a middle-college/university level knowledge base and provides fundamentals of how the body works, I actually used a version of this in my 2nd year of college in a class full of pre-med/vet/biomed researchers

https://www.amazon.com/Fundamentals-Human-Physiology-Lauralee-Sherwood/dp/0840062257/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2B3Q8XWOX2KJ2&keywords=fundamentals+of+physiology+sherwood&qid=1566022964&s=gateway&sprefix=sherwood+fundamental%2Caps%2C157&sr=8-1

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3) If you're looking for a 1st/2nd year medical student level information in video review format (this is like a review format of the text below in #4):

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-oN4AbdB4jdbFVCHMSrxNg/videos

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4) If you're looking for seriously intense detail at a medical school level (this would be seriously overkill and probably difficult to digest without a college background but you mentioned textbook that goes into specific things):

https://www.amazon.com/Robbins-Cotran-Pathologic-Disease-Pathology/dp/1455726133

This textbook basically explains the basis of most diseases from a pathologic basis. You essentially have to memorize most of this textbook in med school. This is the basis for every specialty of medicine.

5) for your own curiosity, then every specialty basically has one or two major texts for their education, one of EM's happens to be (I do not remotely recommend buying this but if you find something to preview or such it gives you an idea of how far the info wormhole goes): https://www.amazon.com/Tintinallis-Emergency-Medicine-Comprehensive-Study/dp/007179476X/ref=sr_1_2?crid=21G3EWBKYQ2PO&keywords=tintanelli%27s+emergency+medicine&qid=1566022753&s=gateway&sprefix=tintanelli%27s%2Caps%2C153&sr=8-2

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6) Here is an EM youtube person who has been putting out really high quality educational content for years, lots of actual video from patients and explanations of what is going on if you're interested in just like... general random medical stuff in an educational entertainment video format:

https://www.youtube.com/user/lmellick

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Also don't forget there are other fields in medicine such as nursing, paramedic, PAs, bio-med research but I can't really speak towards those well.

u/KnightofBaldMt · 3 pointsr/medicalschool

I asked this question a while back. I'm about to finish up the cardio section of our cardiopulm unit. In my opinion, it depends on how much time you have. How much time are you actually going to have to read this resource outside of lecture and study time?

I bought both Physiology by Costanzo and the mentioned Lilly Pathophys of Heart Disease. In my opinion, I liked Costanzo's book better. Disclaimer: I didn't have time to read all of Lilly's book. Costanzo has a whole chapter (fairly long though) and it does an amazing job of going through the physio. I would say it doesn't cover the ECG well (just describing waves and comparing them to phases of depolarization of the ventricle). That said, I would still use Costanzo if I had to do it over again.

u/Cavellian · 2 pointsr/Anatomy
  1. Overall, I highly recommend getting some sort of undergrad level physiology book to study along with anatomy. Knowing Latin suffixes and prefixes really help too. I personally use Human Physiology: From Cells to Systems and Textbook of Medical Physiology.

    2a. Seems to me that "investing" is defined as a subcategory of "deep", based on what you quoted. Like if you have deep fascia with certain branches that invest/dig deeper into a particular group of muscles. It just comes back to the definition of "investing". I personally wouldn't worry so much about differentiating between them. The focus is more of the fact that they're fascia and they have specific functions depending on where they are.

    2b. Soma relates to a wall. Analogy: soma is a box; viscera is the stuff you put into the box.
u/Moose_knuckle69 · 2 pointsr/ems

Honestly, keep doing what you’re doing. Hold yourself accountable, and take those mistakes as an opportunity to learn about something. When you “do something stupid” make a mental note to not do it again, or focus on how you will do whatever it is next time. Also if you want some good bang for your buck reading, look no further...

https://www.amazon.com/Clinical-Pathophysiology-Made-Ridiculously-Simple/dp/0940780801

Seriously, they even have silly drawings that help illustrate body systems and whatnot, it’s one of my favorite reads.

u/Frigax · 6 pointsr/medicine

I'm not sure what "non-textbook" means, but I highly recommend Constanzo's Physiology. It provides a good mix of detail and big-picture.

u/Orangesoflife · 1 pointr/promos

This is a book on a certain medical practice that my brother would really like, I just can't afford it. He just got into med school and is so intelligent. Please help!

http://www.amazon.com/Diagnostic-Dysmorphology-J-M-Aase/dp/030643444X
http://www.amazon.com/Smiths-Recognizable-Patterns-Human-Malformation/dp/0721606156/ref=pd_sim_b_1

u/SongeeX · 2 pointsr/step1

I really liked Costanzo's Physiology (https://www.amazon.com/Physiology-STUDENT-CONSULT-Online-Costanzo/dp/145570847X) book. It's well written and I believe detailed enough while being not too long. It is easy to read and understand.

u/rescue_1 · 3 pointsr/ems

This is what I used in school

It can be a bit overwhelming at first (and even after that haha), there are some good youtube videos and stuff that can help as well.

u/drkrr · 1 pointr/Anki

Much appreciated!

I actually plan to study medicine myself, and I've seen the flashcard flow chart. From your post, I take it you recommend beginning with zanki, and thus relying on Pathoma and Sketchy?

It'll be a few years until I'll start studying, but I've been thinking about—as a primer—doing Incremental Reading on these first.

u/anhydrous_echinoderm · 3 pointsr/medicalschool

I 100% agree with priming with pathoma, though I would also say that this would be an excellent alternate in terms of a primer.

u/vespera23 · 1 pointr/medicalschool

If you want to test your knowledge, review questions might help. You may want to grab The Robbins review.

Haven't tried it yet but I've heard it's a good question bank

u/spudhussle · 1 pointr/nursing

https://www.amazon.com/dp/080362493X/ref=cm_sw_r_sms_apa_i_mSM2DbQK6MH94


As she learns diseases, she can look at these. It really helped things stick for me and make things less overwhelming. They have cute Lister sheers on Amazon as well. They are my go to scissor.

u/Rosselman · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace

Here's where I learned my stuff.. Sadly copyright prevents me from linking it, but there's free sources out there. PubMed has a ton of papers about aging mechanisms.

u/gurgz · 3 pointsr/StudentNurse

Have you taken patho-physiology yet? When making patho-phys flowcharts for my care plans, I get everything I need out of the textbook. Here's the text I use:
http://www.amazon.com/Essentials-Pathophysiology-Concepts-Altered-Health/dp/1582557241/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1411167972&sr=8-1&keywords=porth+essentials+of+pathophysiology

u/coasttablet · 3 pointsr/medicalschool

Either the BRS or Physiology, both by Linda Costanzo. they're quite similar, if you prefer bulletpoints then BRS, if you're more into text (and nicer illustrations) then Physiology

u/randysilva · 3 pointsr/medicalschool

there's a 5th edition coming out in august: http://www.amazon.com/Physiology-STUDENT-CONSULT-Online-Costanzo/dp/145570847X/ref=dp_ob_title_bk

but for physio i would just stick with BRS (same author) + tons of practice questions. physio is one of the subjects where critical thinking and problem solving is more important so you need to do lots of practice questions...compared to something like micro which is mostly just buzzwords and memorization

u/AnatomyGuy · 6 pointsr/askscience

A great pathology textbook would be Robbins et. al. Pathologic Basis of Disease. It was what we used in medical school, and I have no complaints about it.

Edit - You may find some of the biology, and chemistry, and anatomy and physiology, concepts are above your head without a college level chemistry/biology/A&P background.... Unfortunately, I do not know good texts to steer you to on basic biology and chemistry. Reguarding A&P my favorite book is Marieb.

Edit 2 - No need to apologize, you speak (or write) English quite well!

u/makkekkazzo · 1 pointr/books

I didn't remember any parituclarly so I made a random research and this is what came out for Robbins and Coltran Pathologic Basis of Disease. As you see there are some that, as normal, are cheaper than the new one but others arrive at 200 puonds. I've never contacted a sellers because I've found cheaper versions.

u/boywbrownhare · 1 pointr/MMA

the Textbook of Medical Physiology states "All body fat is made from glucose."

it's not the fat in the burgers he's eating. it's the bun. and the soda. and the fries. carbs make you fat. see my other post ITT.

u/SabaBoBaba · 1 pointr/StudentNurse

http://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Pathophysiology-5e-Huether/dp/0323078915

Textbook from my patho class. I've used it every semester ever since.

u/grimmwrath · 3 pointsr/medicine

Smith's Recognizable Patterns Of Human Malformation
Otherwise known as the scary picture book. I've done a lot of work in pediatrics, and some of that stuff I just pray I never have to see IRL.

u/jamienicole3x · 3 pointsr/prephysicianassistant

Yes! 1) PANCE Prep Pearls, 2) Step-Up To Medicine, 3) First Aid for the Psychiatry Clerkship, 4) Pathophysiology Made Ridiculously Simple, 5) Clinical Neuroanatomy Made Ridiculously Easy.

2) Don't be afraid to change your study habits. You probably won't study the same way you did in undergrad or even post-bacc. It's a whole new ballgame.

u/Aulritta · 15 pointsr/askscience

When someone dies of starvation, the cause of death is severe electrolyte imbalance or kidney, heart, or lung failure. These are due inadequate intake of nutrients and subsequent reduction in available energy resources.

After the fat stores are exhausted (lipolysis), the body begins to break down proteins from skeletal muscles and other viscera (including smooth muscle) in a process called proteolysis, which is a signal that the body will be shutting down soon. The textbook I'm reading from states that starvation is treated with either enteral (by mouth or by tube into the stomach/gastric tract) or parenteral (by IV infusion) nutrition. Such a program of nutrition would be at the direction of a physician or dietitian.

Additionally, the stomach acids will break down food even after the person is dead, but this doesn't affect the most important part of caloric intake: Absorption from the GI lining. The breakdown of food into chyme is only part of the work of digestion, with the greater part being the regulation and maintenance of nutrient absorption, especially in the small intestine. The problem with starvation is hypoplasia and atrophy of the GI tract (and other places), which will severely reduce the ability of the body to absorb nutrients.

Source: My patho textbook