Flashcards Med Students Actually Use

🏥 Medical School is Hard. Studying Shouldn't Be.

Your textbooks are massive. Your time is limited. Creating high-quality flashcards manually? A nightmare.

🚀 qVault Flashcard Generator does it for you—fast, accurate, and research-backed.

Cardiac Physiology

What is the difference between systolic and diastolic heart failure?

Pharmacology

Name the 5 major classes of antihypertensive medications.

Neurology

What are the clinical features of Parkinson's disease?

Immunology

Explain the difference between active and passive immunity.

Revolutionize Your Medical Studies

qVault transforms complex medical content into effective learning tools

Intelligent Extraction

Our AI doesn't just scan text—it understands medical concepts and their relationships.

InputTextbook excerpt

"Parkinson's disease is characterized by the loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra, leading to motor symptoms including bradykinesia, resting tremor, and rigidity..."

OutputGenerated flashcard

What are the three cardinal motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease?

Bradykinesia, resting tremor, and rigidity

Contextual Understanding

qVault recognizes medical terminology and extracts key concepts with precision.

Relationship Mapping

Our AI identifies connections between concepts for deeper learning.

Evidence-Based Format

Flashcards follow proven learning science principles for maximum retention.

0%

Cut flashcard creation time

3

Optimized card types

100%

Medical accuracy

Unlike ChatGPT or generic AI tools, qVault is built for medical education

Every card is precise, structured, and optimized for effective learning, developed by researchers from King's College London.

Generate high-quality flashcards in seconds

Customize formats & flashcard types

Seamless Anki export—start learning instantly

🔬 Built on Learning Science, Not AI Hype

We don't just "summarize" your notes. We structure them into flashcards that actually help you remember.

🏥 Basic Factual Recall

Core medical facts, key enumerations, and must-know concepts for strong foundational knowledge.

🔄 Comparative / Contrast Cards

Strengthen understanding with "What's the difference between X and Y?" to build critical thinking.

🔗 Relationship/Association Cards

Connect concepts for better recall and lateral thinking, essential for clinical reasoning.

❌ No cloze deletions, no bloated cards. Just what works.

💡 Designed for deep learning, not shallow memorization.

See qVault in Action

Watch how medical content transforms into effective flashcards in seconds

qVault Flashcard Generator

Input Text

Acute myocardial infarction (MI) is caused by plaque rupture and thrombus formation in a coronary artery, leading to myocardial ischemia and necrosis. ST-elevation MI (STEMI) is characterized by ST-segment elevation on ECG and typically results from complete occlusion of a coronary artery. Non-ST-elevation MI (NSTEMI) lacks ST elevation but shows troponin elevation, often from partial or temporary occlusion.

Treatment for STEMI focuses on immediate reperfusion via primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or fibrinolytic therapy if PCI is unavailable within 120 minutes. NSTEMI management includes antiplatelet therapy, anticoagulation, and risk stratification to determine timing of coronary angiography.

Both STEMI and NSTEMI patients receive secondary prevention with aspirin, P2Y12 inhibitors, statins, beta-blockers, and ACE inhibitors or ARBs as appropriate. Complications of MI include arrhythmias, heart failure, cardiogenic shock, mechanical complications (e.g., papillary muscle rupture), and pericarditis.

Generated Flashcards

What is the pathophysiology of acute myocardial infarction?

Plaque rupture and thrombus formation in a coronary artery, leading to myocardial ischemia and necrosis.

What is the difference between STEMI and NSTEMI?

STEMI: ST-segment elevation on ECG, typically from complete coronary artery occlusion.
NSTEMI: No ST elevation but elevated troponin, often from partial or temporary occlusion.

What are the treatment approaches for STEMI?

Immediate reperfusion via primary PCI or fibrinolytic therapy if PCI is unavailable within 120 minutes.

What medications are used for secondary prevention after MI?

Aspirin, P2Y12 inhibitors, statins, beta-blockers, and ACE inhibitors or ARBs as appropriate.

85% faster than creating flashcards manually

⚡ How It Works

1

Upload Your Medical Content

📄 Text-based uploads: Notes, textbooks, or lecture slides.

📷 Images? Coming soon. (Text today, images next—we're iterating fast for you!)

2

Customize Your Flashcards

🎯 You control the card type & format—because different topics need different approaches.

3

AI Generates Your Deck Instantly

⚡ No wasted time. Just high-quality, well-structured flashcards.

4

Export & Study

📂 Seamless Export Options: Anki-ready (.apkg), Plain text, or qVault Custom Formatting.

⏳ Spend less time making flashcards, more time mastering medicine.

🔥 Why Medical Students Trust qVault

Unlike free AI tools, qVault delivers med-specific precision.

Zero ambiguity. Every fact is crystal clear.

Our AI is trained specifically on medical content to ensure accuracy and clarity in every flashcard.

Designed for medical school retention.

Based on cognitive learning science and optimized for the unique challenges of medical education.

100% customizable.

Choose formats, card types, and study preferences to match your learning style and needs.

Fast. Reliable. Secure.

Built by medical students & educators at KCL who understand what you need to succeed.

📢 What Med Students Are Saying

ST

Sarah T.

KCL Final Year Medical Student

"I used to spend hours making flashcards. Now, qVault does it for me in seconds."

JL

James L.

3rd-Year Med Student

"Most AI flashcards are vague. These actually help me pass exams."

DR

Dr. R.

Medical Educator

"I stopped drowning in notes after qVault."

🚀 Join the Research Beta – Free for KCL Students

🎓 Sign up in 30 seconds. Get access immediately.
🎯 Help shape the future of AI-powered medical learning.
💡 Exclusive perks for early users.