156 Wounds, Burns, Skin Cancer & The Study System That Exposes Your Gaps
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About this listen
In this episode of the Physician Assistant Exam Review Podcast, we tackle skin integrity from two angles: what you need to recognize on exams, and how to reorganize your studying so you can finally see (and fix) your gaps. We walk through burns, lacerations, pressure injuries, urticaria, pilonidal disease, and the big three skin cancers: basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and melanoma. You'll learn how exam questions are actually written: TBSA and depth for burns, time and contamination for laceration closure, staging and offloading for pressure injuries, severity (not appearance) for urticaria, and when a "weird spot" on the skin needs biopsy right now.
Then we zoom out. Instead of memorizing disconnected facts, we use this content to show you how to reorganize your studying around patterns and decision points: which lesions are benign vs premalignant vs malignant, what represents true cancer, and what the very first step is when melanoma is on the table. We also get honest about why most people avoid finding their gaps, why that avoidance is quietly capping your scores, and a practical way to make gap-finding less scary and more systematic.
If you're working hard but still feel exposed on derm and procedures, this episode will help you think different, work different, and score different.