In the high-stakes, high-pressure world of medical education, few names command as much respect and reverence as Dr. Najeeb. For decades, medical students, nursing professionals, and healthcare practitioners from all corners of the globe have turned to his video lectures to demystify the complexities of physiology, pathology, and biochemistry. However, while the videos are legendary, there is an equally valuable resource that often goes under-discussed yet is highly sought after: .

Nevertheless, "Dr. Najeeb Notes" have become a cult resource among international medical students and those who struggle with rote memorization. In an era of AI-generated summaries, these imperfect, human-drawn notes are a testament to a simple truth:

When students search for "Dr Najeeb Notes," they are generally looking for one of two things:

At first glance, the notes appear unassuming—often dense, black-and-white hand-drawn schematics filled with arrows, color-coded pathways (via colored pens), and repetitive annotations. However, their value lies not in graphic design but in . Because Dr. Najeeb’s video lectures are famously lengthy (sometimes 2–3 hours per topic), the notes serve as a "hand-drawn transcript" of the logical flow. They force the student to reconstruct the neural pathway of an idea—from the ionic basis of an action potential to the clinical presentation of Guillain-Barré syndrome.

These are the most popular versions found on GitHub, Reddit (r/medicalschool), and Telegram. Students pause the video and trace his drawings into their notebooks (digital or paper).