Kenhub Atlas Of Human Anatomy May 2026

One of the biggest hurdles for first-year medical students is the "cadaver-to-atlas" transfer. Traditional atlases are highly stylized; real cadavers are messy, discolored, and variable. Kenhub solves this by providing two distinct views for each structure:

The Kenhub Atlas distinguishes itself through active recall integration: Kenhub Atlas of Human Anatomy

| Traditional Atlas | Kenhub Atlas | |-------------------|---------------| | Static labeled diagrams | Clickable labels that hide/reveal | | Separate quiz book | Atlas images double as quiz mode: "Identify structure #7" | | Text-only clinical notes | Clinical pop-ups that link directly to labeled structures | | No tracking | Performance analytics per body region | One of the biggest hurdles for first-year medical

Example workflow:
A student studies the brachial plexus illustration → clicks "Quiz Mode" → the same image appears without labels, and they must type the correct nerve name → incorrect answers are tracked and resurface in spaced repetition. The atlas covers all major regions of the

The atlas covers all major regions of the human body, organized into eight modules:

Within the atlas interface, users can activate "Quiz Mode." This grays out all structure names. Users then click on a structure (e.g., "What is this muscle?"), and the label appears. This transforms the atlas from a passive reference into an active testing ground.