need help with your account or subscription? click here to email us (or see the contact page)
join telegramNEW! discord
jump to exam page:
search for anything ⋅ score predictor (โ€œpredict me!โ€)

NBME 22 Answers

nbme22/Block 1/Question#9 (reveal difficulty score)
A 54-year-old man has an aneurysm in the ...
2.4 ๐Ÿ” / ๐Ÿ“บ / ๐ŸŒณ / ๐Ÿ“–
tags: calculation

 Login (or register) to see more


 +17  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—keycompany(351)
get full access to all contentpick a username

Flow Rate = Velocity x Cross-Sectional Area

2 cm^2 x 20 cm/sec x 60 sec/min x 1 L/1,000 cm^3 = 2.4 L/min

1,000 cm^3 = 1 L

get full access to all contentpick a username
seagull  Well, I missed this one. I don't even feel bad. +78
link981  @keycompany a small typo, 100 cm^3 = 1 L not 1000cm^3. 1000 mL^3= 1 L +1
hello  @keycompany how did you edit your original comment to fix your typo? +1
winelover777  Pretty sure @keycompany was correct. 1 L = 1000 cm^3. Otherwise the answer would be 24. +4
drdoom  1 centimeter is a distance. (A line.) +1
drdoom  If we multiply a line by another line, we get a surface area. (A piece of paper.) +1
drdoom  If we multiply the piece of paper by another line, we get volume. (A cube. A box.) +1
drdoom  If we fill the box with a fluid, we will have 1 mL of this fluid. +1
drdoom  If we have a thousand of these boxes, we have 1 L of fluid. +1
drdoom  1,ooo mL = 1 Liter = 1,ooo centimeterยณ +1

if one still doesn't understand to add on .. 1000 cm^3 = 1000 ml 1000ml = 1 Litre



 +6  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—nwinkelmann(366)
get full access to all contentpick a username

I've never been good at converting units :( lol so had to ask my brother. He told me that:

distance ร— distance = distance2 = area

and,

distance ร— distance ร— distance = distance2 ร— distance = distance3 = volume

Gotta love public school for never been taught that ... geesh (obviously I've done the equations and stuff, just never been told it that way/that simple before). Knowing that makes figuring out the equation much easier:

Flow rate = velocity ร— CSA = 20 cm/sec ร— 2cm2 = 40cm3/sec

To convert to L/min, just multiply:

40cm3/sec ร— 60 sec/min ร— 1L/1,000cm3 = 2400 L/1,000 min = 2.4 L/min

Hope this helped!

get full access to all contentpick a username
impostersyndromel1000  to all my public school peeps out there (and not the nice public schools in rich areas, the real public schools)... we made it! +4
angelaq11  Thankfully I was taught how to convert units, but let me tell you that I was SO lost on this one. It's USELESS to know how to do it if you (I, I mean I) don't know the damn formula xD. Obviously got this one wrong, but it's good to know that if it ever comes up again (and I know it won't) I already know it. +2

This is all you need for conversions:

1cm3 = 1 ml ... thus 40 cm3 = 40 ml

So to make it faster I would do it like this

40 ml/sec * 60 sec/1min * 1L/1000ml = 2.4 L/min

+3/- majoav1(2)


 +2  upvote downvote
submitted by seracen(15)
get full access to all contentpick a username

Ugh, sorry, getting used to the formatting, and accidentally posted it in the wrong place.

Anyways, to reiterate, I always just look at the units. It wants L/min, I'm given cm^2 and cm/sec

So I multiply, to get volume out of it (cm^3), then convert seconds to minutes.

Thus, it's basically 2x2x6, in some shape or form after placing the decimals appropriately. Good thing they didn't add that particular wrinkle, I'll take my remedial math skills and bug out, haha...

get full access to all contentpick a username



 +1  upvote downvote
submitted by googaga(2)
get full access to all contentpick a username

Testing testing 123. This is a test post to see if things un scram ble by typing a comment. Thanks.

get full access to all contentpick a username
drdoom  i respect this attempt but i don't think it works that way +2



 +0  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—usmleboy(19)
get full access to all contentpick a username

This question was on my MCAT and I laughed when I saw it.

Things you gave to know: cm^3 = mL , then how to convert units.

2cm^2 x 20 cm/sec = 40cm^3 / sec = 40 mL / sec

From here just convert 40 mL / sec to L / min

40 mL / sec x 1 L / 1000 mL x 60 sec / 1 minute = 2.4 L / min

get full access to all contentpick a username



 -1  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—kernicterusthefrog(139)
get full access to all contentpick a username

Just in case that lovely little equation provided by @keycompany wasn't quite enough for you, here's a link to a more complete explanation by Kahn Academy. Helped me, when I looked at the equation and said, whaaaa?

get full access to all contentpick a username

If, like me, you dislike memorizing formulas, but are okay doing the actual math, I always just look at the units. It wanted L/min, and I had to get it using cm^2 and cm/sec...

Well, I know cm^3 gives volume (L) after bashing out a few conversions, so multiply it is!

Then I know to turn seconds into minutes, so multiply by 60.

Now, at this point, I knew my decimals were off, but still, 4x6 = 24, so it's some version of that. Had they included 24 or .24 as answers, I'd have actually had to pay attention to my conversions.

Anyways, I hope that helps!

+4/- seracen(15)


Must-See Comments from nbme22

sacredazn on Unrearranged immunoglobulin gene
seagull on Decreased binding of RNA polymerase
seagull on Anticholinergic
liverdietrying on Release of stored thyroid hormone from a ...
keycompany on Negative nitrogen balance
kernicterusthefrog on Displacement
mcl on Area labeled โ€˜Dโ€™
joha961 on Displacement
imgdoc on Area labeled โ€˜Cโ€™ (Abducens nucleus, right)
alwaysanonymous on 25 mL/cm H2O
drdoom on 1 in 600
seagull on Glutamine
bubbles on Acute retroviral infection
yotsubato on Phase variation

search for anything NEW!