Question 1
Question
The NP is reading the literature about a drug. The article reports that the drug is potent. The NP knows that this means that the drug:
Answer
-
Produces its effect at low doses
-
Produces strong effects at any dose
-
Requires high doses to produce its effects
-
Is very likely to cause adverse effects
Question 2
Question
Except for gene therapy, which statements are true about drug-receptor interactions? SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Answer
-
Drugs can mimic the actions of endogenous molecules.
-
Receptors for drugs do not respond to hormones and neurotransmitters produced by the body.
-
The binding of a drug to its receptor is usually irreversible.
-
Drugs can block the actions of endogenous molecules.
-
Drugs can give the cell new functions.
Question 3
Question
Which assessment findings suggest hypersensitivity of the receptors when a patient suddenly stops taking atenolol (Tenormin), a beta 2 receptor antagonist that slows the heart rate?
Question 4
Question
A patient who has over dosed on methadone HCL (Metadol), an opiate, is brought to the emergency department unresponsive with severely depressed respirations. The patient receives intravenous naloxone HCL (Narcan), an opiod antagonist, with a dramatic improvement in the level of consciousness and respiratory rate and effort within minutes. Which is the priority action 45-60 minutes after the naloxone HCL is administered?
Answer
-
Assess for the return of pain because the effect of the naloxone HCL should be peaking.
-
Assess the need to administer another dose of naloxone HCL because the respiratory and CNS depression may return as the medication effect ends.
-
Prepare to administer the drug intramuscularly if the drug has not taken effect.
-
Prepare to counter act the effects of the opiod withdrawal.
Question 5
Question
When the therapeutic index of a drug is narrow, what should the NP expect?
Answer
-
Blood levels of the drug would be monitored throughout the therapy.
-
The drug would produce the desired effect at low doses.
-
The drug would produce many adverse effects at low doses.
-
The drug would only be used in an emergency.
Question 6
Question
Pharmacodynamics includes the study of how drugs work.
Question 7
Question
Phase 2 of the dose response relationship starts at the point when the therapeutic effect does not increase with the increasing dose.
Question 8
Question
Maximal efficacy is defined as the largest effect that a drug can produce.
Question 9
Question
Potency is defined as the dose of drug needed to get the desired effect.
Question 10
Question
Two drugs in the same therapeutic class with different recommended doses (2mg vs. 200mg) can have equal effects.
Question 11
Question
A drug that stimulates a family of receptors that are transcription factors does not reach a therapeutic effect until taken regularly for 2wks.
Question 12
Question
A drug that is selective for specific receptors will produce more unintended effects than a nonselective drug.
Question 13
Question
If a drug is selective for specific receptors it is safe.
Question 14
Question
Affinity is the strength of attraction between a drug and its receptor.
Question 15
Question
Drugs with high intrinsic activity cause an intense response.
Question 16
Question
An agonist blocks the stimulation of a receptor.
Question 17
Question
If a receptor is constantly bombarded by a drug, the cell can down-regulate and decrease the response to the drug.
Question 18
Question
If a patient suddenly stops taking an antagonist drug, he can have a hypersensitivity of the receptor and overstimulation.
Question 19
Question
The ED 50 is usually the recommended dose for the drug.
Question 20
Answer
-
Change in drug structure; makes drug more hydrophilic
-
Change in drug structure/movement out of the body
-
Movement of drug from blood into tissues/cells
-
Movement of drug into and out of the body; what body does to drug
-
Movement of drug into the blood
-
Movement of drug out of the body
Question 21
Answer
-
Change in drug structure; makes drug more hydrophilic
-
Change in drug structure/movement out of the body
-
Movement of drug from blood into tissues/cells
-
Movement of drug into and out of the body; what body does to drug
-
Movement of drug into the blood
-
Movement of drug out of the body
Question 22
Answer
-
Change in drug structure; makes drug more hydrophilic
-
Change in drug structure/movement out of the body
-
Movement of drug from blood into tissues/cells
-
Movement of drug into and out of the body; what body does to drug
-
Movement of drug into the blood
-
Movement of drug out of the body
Question 23
Answer
-
Change in drug structure; makes drug more hydrophilic
-
Change in drug structure/movement out of the body
-
Movement of drug from blood into tissues/cells
-
Movement of drug into and out of the body; what body does to drug
-
Movement of drug into the blood
-
Movement of drug out of the body
Question 24
Answer
-
Change in drug structure; makes drug more hydrophilic
-
Change in drug structure/movement out of the body
-
Movement of drug from blood into tissues/cells
-
Movement of drug into and out of the body; what body does to drug
-
Movement of drug into the blood
-
Movement of drug out of the body
Question 25
Question
Pharmacokinetics
Answer
-
Change in drug structure; makes drug more hydrophilic
-
Change in drug structure/movement out of the body
-
Movement of drug from blood into tissues/cells
-
Movement of drug into and out of the body; what body does to drug
-
Movement of drug into the blood
-
Movement of drug out of the body
Question 26
Question
Which of the following labs would suggest to the NP that a patient may be at risk for drug toxicity secondary to impaired excretion?
Answer
-
AST 72 IU
-
INR 4.2
-
eGFR 30mL/min
-
WBC 13,000 mm3
Question 27
Question
What is the priority action to assist a patient in PACU to promote excretion of most anesthetics?
Question 28
Question
Lanoxin (Digoxin) is a drug with a narrow therapeutic index. Which interventions would be critical for the NP to implement? SELECT ALL THAT APPLY.
Answer
-
Administer the medication only on a PRN basis.
-
Monitor the patient for therapeutic and toxic effects
-
Be diligent about the timing of drug administration
-
Monitor blood levels of the drug
-
Teach the patient that the drug takes several weeks to reach its peak effect
Question 29
Question
Grapefruit juice inhibits the CYP 450 system enzymes (CYP3A4 enzyme specifically) and inhibits p-glycoprotein in the intestines for days after ingestion. This especially affects calcium channel blockers, benzodiazepines, cyclosporine, and “statin” drugs. The NP would explain to the patient that ingesting grapefruit juice causes:
Answer
-
Excessive first-pass effect
-
Excess levels of drug in the blood
-
Lack of therapeutic drug effect
-
Rapid excretion of the drug
Question 30
Question
A patient receiving Vancomycin for a serious infection, has been ordered to have a peak and trough level drawn. When would the NP order these blood levels to be obtained?
Answer
-
Peak level 1.5-hours after infusion and trough level 30 minutes before the next dose.
-
Peak level 1.5-hours before infusion is started and trough level immediately after infusion of the drug is completed.
-
Peak level while the drug is infusing and trough level trough level immediately after infusion of the drug is completed.
-
Peak level while the drug is infusing and trough level 30 minutes before the next dose.
Question 31
Question
A patient has stopped taking levothyroxine (Synthroid) 3 days ago. The drug has a half-life of 7 days. The patient tells the NP that the drug must not have been necessary because he/the patient does not feel any different. Which of the following is the basis of the NP’s explanation for this phenomenon?
Answer
-
The patient’s dose was probably too high, so the drug is still working.
-
The patient could not have been taking the drug as prescribed.
-
The drug probably was not needed if the pt. has not experienced symptoms.
-
The drug’s previous doses have not been completely eliminated from the body.
Question 32
Question
The NP prescribes the following medications for a patient: glyburide (Diabeta) 10mg by mouth daily for diabetes and quinapril HCL (Accupril) 20mg by mouth daily for hypertension. The NP should advise Quinipril (ACEI) potentiates the action of glyburide (sulfonylureas) so the patient should be cautioned to monitor for signs and symptoms of hypoglycemia. The dose of the glyburide may need adjustment. In addition, the meds (specially the glyburide) should be administered with breakfast.
Question 33
Question
Which of the following is true for a drug that acts as a reversibly-binding partial agonist?
Answer
-
The effect of the drug cannot be overcome by an increase in the endogenous agonist.
-
The drug will have an effect on the Emax of the endogenous agonist.
-
The drug will have an effect on EC50 of the endogenous agonist.
-
The drug will effectively decrease the efficacy of the endogenous agonist.
Question 34
Question
Which of the following is most dependent on a drug's EC50?
Answer
-
Drug potency.
-
Drug efficacy.
-
Volume of Distribution.
-
Therapeutic Index.
Question 35
Question
In the following illustration, which drug is the most efficacious?
Question 36
Question
In the following illustration, if B is an endogenous agonist, A is most likely?
Answer
-
A competitive inhibitor.
-
A noncompetitive inhibitor.
-
An allosteric potentiator.
-
It is impossible to tell based in the information in this graph.
Question 37
Question
In the follow graph, which of the following parameters is a comparison of ED50 to LD50?
Answer
-
Therapeutic Index
-
Standard Safety Margin
-
Therapeutic Window
-
None of the above
Question 38
Question
Which of the following is not a factor influencing drug membrane passage?
Answer
-
Molecular size
-
Lipid solubility
-
Volume of distribution
-
Degree of ionization
-
Concentration gradient
Question 39
Question
The fraction of drug reaching circulation following administration is known by which abbreviation?
Question 40
Question
Which of the following routes of absorption are in the correct order in terms of rate of absorption?
Answer
-
intravenous = subcutaneous > inhalational > intramuscular > oral
-
intravenous = inhalational > subcutaneous > intramuscular > oral
-
intravenous = inhalational > intramuscular > oral > subcutaneous
-
intravenous = inhalational > intramuscular > subcutaneous > oral
Question 41
Question
Which of the following is true regarding the graph below?
Answer
-
Drug B has an availability equal to that of drug A.
-
Drug C has a rate equal to that of drug A.
-
The availability of B & C are dictated by their peak plasma concentration.
-
The difference in AUC between A and C dictate their relative availabilities.
Question 42
Question
Concerning drug receptor interactions, the constant Kd refers to:
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Answer
-
maximal physiological effect
-
maximal binding
-
the drug concentration required to occupy 50% of receptors
-
drug concentration that results in half-maximal physiological response
Question 43
Question
Signal transduction involves G protein coupled receptor systems:
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Answer
-
biogenic amines
-
peptide hormones
-
eicosanoids
Question 44
Question
Example(s) of second messenger effect(s):
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Question 45
Question
EC50 mainly reflects a drug's:
Answer
-
maximal effect
-
potency
-
lethality
-
ease of elimination
-
safety
Question 46
Question
Physiological processes mediated by the intracellular second messenger, cyclic AMP:
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Question 47
Question
Drug effects are thought to be proportional to the number of occupied receptors
Question 48
Question
Nitric oxide mediates this effect on vascular smooth muscle:
Question 49
Question
Receptors are usually:
Question 50
Question
Longer-lasting physiological response to drug:
Question 51
Question
True statement(s) concerning competitive inhibition:
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Answer
-
competitive in addition is based on reversible drug/antagonist binding at receptor sites
-
with competitive inhibition, the dose-effects curve the shifted to the left
-
with competitive inhibition, maximal drug effect cannot be obtained, even at high agonist concentrations
Question 52
Question
Example(s) of endogenous ligands that interact with membrane-integrated ion channels and affect(s) ion conductance.
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Answer
-
acetylcholine
-
GABA
-
glutamate
-
aspartate
-
glycine
Question 53
Question
Example(s) of (a) receptor(s) which is/are enzyme(s):
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Answer
-
dihydrofolate reductase
-
acetylcholinesterase
-
monoamine oxidase
Question 54
Question
Primary mechanism by which cAMP effects are terminated:
Question 55
Question
An example of a receptor which is a structural protein.
Answer
-
Na/K ATPase
-
acetylcholinesterase
-
tubulin
-
DNA
-
phospholipase C
Question 56
Question
An example of an agent that exerts much of its effects through intracellular receptors that in complex form binds to DNA response elements:
Answer
-
acetylcholine
-
dopamine
-
corticosteroids
-
diltiazem
-
atropine
Question 57
Question
Factors that may cause variation in drug responsiveness:
Answer
-
changes in the number or function of receptors
-
tachyphylaxis
-
idiosyncratic drug responses
-
hypersensitivity reactions
-
all of the above
Question 58
Question
Major roles of receptors:
Answer
-
determine rate of drug elimination
-
determine drug action selectivity
-
provide a means of blocking drug action as well as mediating drug action
-
act as drug storage sites
Question 59
Question
Concerning oral administration -- disadvantages
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Answer
-
least economical
-
drug taken orally may cause emesis
-
drug taken orally may be destroyed by gastric acidity
-
drug taken orally may be metabolized by gastrointestinal flora
-
drug taken orally may be inconsistently absorbed due to the presence of food
Question 60
Question
Factors That Can Affect Pharmacokinetics
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Question 61
Question
Factors That Affect Bioavailability:
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Question 62
Question
Factors affecting absorption:
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Answer
-
Formulation
-
Mechanics of absorption
-
pH
-
Molecular size
-
Lipophilicity
-
2nd messengers
-
Cellular environment
-
Ionization
Question 63
Question
Most drugs are strong acids (-) or bases (+)
Question 64
Question
Uncharged drugs are more lipid soluble
Question 65
Question
Ionized drug molecules more lipid soluble
Question 66
Question
You can create a non-ionized form of an acidic drug by placing it in an acidic environment
Question 67
Question
Drugs with low molecular weight pass through membrane pores more easily
Question 68
Question
Active transport is drug movement from area of higher
concentration to lower concentration
Question 69
Question
Biotransformation reactions occur first with Phase I followed by Phase II.
Question 70
Question
CYP cytochromes are non-specific, so they could all act on the same drugs.
Question 71
Question
Biotransformation occurs:
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Answer
-
liver
-
intestines
-
skin
-
lungs
-
kidney
-
brain
-
muscles
-
heart
Question 72
Question
During Phase II biotransformation, drugs can conjugate with which of the following:
Answer
-
glucoronic acid
-
sulphuric acid
-
acetic acid
-
amino acid
-
all of the above
Question 73
Question
Conjugation occurs during Phase I of biotransformation
Question 74
Question
Enzyme induction can cause potential toxicity
Question 75
Question
Only certain drugs are hepatotoxic
Question 76
Question
Alcoholism and fatty liver disease affect drug metabolism
Question 77
Question
Factors that affect drug metabolism:
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
Answer
-
Age
-
Comorbidities
-
Liver dysfunction
-
Gender
Question 78
Question
In an 18-month-old baby, these factors could affect biotransformation:
Answer
-
P-450 enzymes not fully developed
-
blood brain barrier not fully developed
-
intestinal enzymes not fully developed
-
renal system not fully developed
-
none of the above
Question 79
Question
A drug must be biotransformed to be excreted
Question 80
Question
Clearance is the sum of elimination from liver, kidneys, and GI tract.
Question 81
Question
All drugs are excreted by the kidneys.
Question 82
Question
After age [blank_start]50[blank_end] people lose [blank_start]10[blank_end] percent of kidney nephrons
every decade.
Question 83
Question
You see a pt with HTN. You've given him a prescription for an antihypertensive BID. He returns in 30 days and his blood pressure is 150/85. He admits to noncompliance with BID dosing. You educate him about the importance of taking the medication as prescribed, because once daily is not enough to maintain adequate blood levels. This is an example of:
Question 84
Question
A patient is taking multiple doses of 100 mg of metoprolol. At what does of medication will the patient reach steady state?
[blank_start]_____[blank_end] mg
Question 85
Question
A patient is given a single dose of morphine for pain relief before leaving the hospital. Since he can't drive while under the influence, he wants to know how long until he can drive. The half-life if morphine is 2 hours. What is your answer?
Answer
-
2 hours
-
4 hours
-
6 hours
-
8 hours
-
10 hours
Question 86
Question
What substances are excreted via the lungs?
Answer
-
Alcohol
-
Liquid
-
Gas
-
Volatile substance
Question 87
Question
Your pregnant patient develops a DVT. You place her on heparin. She mentions she doesn't like shots. Should you place her on warfarin instead to increase medication compliance?
Answer
-
Yes, drug compliance is very important. Because DVTs are so serious, increasing drug compliance is the primary concern.
-
No, heparin is better for the baby.
Question 88
Question
Until age 2, children have [blank_start]80[blank_end]% body water, in contrast to adults, who have [blank_start]60[blank_end]%.
Question 89
Question
Despite differences in body makeup, infants and children have consistent rates of absorption.
Question 90
Question
A laboratory is conducting a study to assess the safety, efficacy, and potency of a group of drugs before allowing the agents to proceed to clinical trials. The figure shows the dose-response curves for four different drugs from the same class of medications (Drugs A, B, C, & D). Which of the following is true regarding these medications?
Answer
-
Drug A has greater efficacy than Drug D
-
Drug D has greater efficacy than Drug A
-
Drug A has greater potency than Drug D
-
Drug D has greater potency than Drug A
-
All four drugs (A,B,C,D) have equal potencies
Question 91
Question
An overweight patient comes to see you about heart palpitations and high blood pressure. You're trying to decide between a once-daily beta blocker and one given every 6 hours. You feel the once-daily is the best choice. Is this correct?
Answer
-
Yes, this is the best choice because once-daily will help with medication compliance.
-
No, this is not the best choice because your patient is overweight.
Question 92
Question
Characteristics of fat-soluble drugs:
cell membrane potential [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
pH [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
molecular size [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Half-life [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Vd [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Ionization [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Absorption [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Route of administration [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Metabolized by [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Question 93
Question
Characteristics of water-soluble drugs:
cell membrane potential [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
pH [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
molecular size [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Half-life [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Vd [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Ionization [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Absorption [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Route of administration [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Metabolized by [blank_start]_____[blank_end]
Answer
-
Cross on their own
-
Use 2nd messengers
-
Acidic
-
Basic
-
Large
-
Small
-
Long
-
Short
-
High
-
Low
-
Charged
-
Uncharged
-
Difficult to absorb
-
Easily absorbed
-
PO
-
IV
-
It doesn't really matter
-
Kidneys
-
Liver