The ABEM Qualifying Exam is ~305 multiple-choice, single-best-answer questions, administered in two timed sessions with a scheduled break. It can feel like a marathon.
You won’t just be reading text on screen — expect to be shown:
The boards are as visual as your ED shifts, where rapid interpretation of images drives diagnosis and management. Learn how to tackle ABEM image questions — from ECG prep to ultrasound test strategies. High-yield tips, pitfalls, and practice resources included.
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The test blueprint comes straight from the 2022 EM Model. You can expect images to play a big part in the following sections:
- Cardiovascular Disorders (10%) – heavily ECG-based.
- Traumatic Disorders (9%) – FAST ultrasound, chest/pelvic radiographs.
- Thoracic/Respiratory Disorders (7%) – chest X-rays (pneumonia, effusion, pulmonary edema).
- Procedures & Skills (8%) – ultrasound-guided vascular access, procedural anatomy.
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ABEM’s pictorial questions still follow the **single-best-answer** format. Common patterns include: pattern recognition, next-step decisions, and integration. All are multiple-choice, single-best-answer questions. So, you’ll get one question, one image, and four or five options — just like text-based questions.
Most people trip up on the same things. Frequent weak spots are:
- ECG misreads (wide-complex tachycardia vs SVT with aberrancy, subtle ischemic changes).
- Ultrasound orientation/artifact pitfalls.
- Chest radiograph subtle findings (small pneumothorax, early edema, widened mediastinum).
- Dermatology recognition gaps (erythema multiforme vs Stevens-Johnson).
👉 Preparing for the ABEM Exam: Study Strategies That Work
- ECG: Wide-complex tachycardia with fusion beats → Ventricular tachycardia.
- CXR: Supine film with deep sulcus sign → Pneumothorax.
- FAST: Anechoic stripe in Morison’s pouch → Hemoperitoneum.
- Dermatology: Target lesions → Erythema multiforme.
- Trust first impressions.
- Use the stem context to guide interpretation.
- Don’t stall; mark and move.
- Apply systematic reads (ABCDE for CXR, stepwise ECG reads).
ABEM confirms images are integral, and external EM societies (EMRA, SAEM, EMRAP) stress that systematic, regular image practice is one of the most reliable ways to improve performance.
Q: Does the ABEM Qualifying Exam include image-based questions?
A: Absolutely. Expect ECGs, radiographs, ultrasounds, CTs, and dermatology images.
Q: How many image questions should I expect?
A: ABEM does not release exact numbers. However, based on the EM Model and exam feedback from test takers, ECGs and radiographs appear frequently, and ultrasound has expanded weight under “Procedures & Skills”.
Q: Are image questions harder than text-based ones?
A: They can be. Many people find ECGs and ultrasounds trip them up under pressure. If you don’t practice visuals, it’s one of the easiest ways to lose points.
Q: What resources are best for practicing ABEM image questions?
A: Not all study tools emphasize pictorial material equally. Here are the best options:
When choosing a QBank, ensure it includes robust pictorial coverage. Some banks underweight images, which can leave candidates underprepared.
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How can you prepare for the ABEM Exams? Med-Challenger Emergency Medicine Board Prep