I'm a PGY-5 neurology resident finishing my program in June and I'm planning to sit for the ABPN initial certification in October. I know I need to register early and that the exam covers both a written component and an oral examination component — though I've heard the format has been updated recently.
My biggest concern is the breadth of the neurology content. There are 22 content domains on the ABPN blueprint ranging from neuromuscular disease to epilepsy to neuro-oncology. I feel solid in stroke and headache from residency volume but I'm weak on neuromuscular and sleep disorders.
I've been told the Continuum series from AAN is the gold standard for study material. I also have Kaufman's Clinical Neurology for Psychiatrists which I used in med school. Are there other resources the neurology community considers essential for this specific exam?
Also wondering about the oral examination — how much does presentation style matter versus content accuracy? I've heard examiners care a lot about how you reason through a case, not just whether you get the diagnosis right.
I passed the ABPN written last year as a newly minted attending. Continuum is essential — don't just read it, do the self-assessment questions at the end of each issue. That's what moves the needle. I also used the MedStudy Neurology Core Curriculum for the domains where Continuum felt too deep.
For the oral exam, your reasoning process is definitely weighted heavily. Examiners want to hear you articulate your differential and defend it with clinical logic, not just land on the correct diagnosis. Practice thinking aloud with a senior colleague doing mock orals — 5 or 6 sessions made a huge difference for me.
Neuromuscular and sleep were my weak spots too. For NMD I'd recommend Preston and Shapiro's EMG text — it's dense but the clinical tables are exactly what the exam tests. For sleep, the AASM guidelines plus one sleep medicine Continuum issue was enough for the sleep-related questions I saw.