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NUR 210/ NUR210 Exam 1 – Principles of Pharmacology Review ACTUAL EXAM 2026/2027 | Principles of Pharmacology Review | Verified Q&A | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded

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Master medication management with this 2026/2027 complete actual exam for NUR 210 Exam 1: Principles of Pharmacology Review at Galen. This 100% verified question and answer set covers key topics: pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, drug absorption and distribution, medication metabolism and excretion, adverse drug reactions, and medication safety principles. Each question includes a detailed rationale to reinforce pharmacotherapeutic concepts. Backed by our Pass Guarantee. Download now.

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Institution
NUR 210/ NUR210
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NUR 210/ NUR210

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​NUR 210/ NUR210 Exam 1 – Principles of​
​Pharmacology Review ACTUAL EXAM​
​2026/2027 | Principles of Pharmacology​
​Review | Verified Q&A | Pass Guaranteed​
​- A+ Graded​
​ ART A – MULTIPLE CHOICE (Q1–60)​
P
​Q1 (Pharmacokinetics – first-pass effect): A patient is prescribed nitroglycerin for acute angina.​
​The nurse understands that the oral route is avoided for this medication primarily because of​
​which pharmacokinetic principle?​
​A. The drug is extensively metabolized by the liver before reaching systemic circulation.​
​B. The drug is poorly absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract.​
​C. The drug causes severe gastric irritation when given orally.​
​D. The drug has a very long half-life and accumulates with oral dosing.​
​[CORRECT] A​
​Rationale: The first-pass effect refers to the rapid metabolism of orally administered drugs by​
​the liver via the portal circulation before they reach systemic circulation, significantly reducing​
​bioavailability; nitroglycerin has nearly 100% first-pass metabolism, making sublingual or​
​transdermal routes necessary. Distractor B is incorrect because nitroglycerin is actually well​
​absorbed from the GI tract but is immediately inactivated by hepatic enzymes. Clinical pearl for​
​Galen students: Always consider first-pass effect when comparing oral versus parenteral​
​bioavailability — drugs with high first-pass metabolism require alternative routes to achieve​
​therapeutic plasma levels.​
​Q2 (Pharmacokinetics – absorption factors): Which factor would most likely DECREASE the​
​rate of absorption of an orally administered medication?​
​A. Taking the medication with a high-fat meal​
​B. Administering the medication on an empty stomach​
​C. Using a liquid formulation instead of a tablet​
​D. Increasing gastric pH with an antacid​
​[CORRECT] A​
​Rationale: High-fat meals delay gastric emptying and can reduce the rate of drug absorption by​
​slowing transit to the small intestine, where most absorption occurs; fats may also bind certain​
​lipophilic drugs, further reducing availability. Distractor D is incorrect because increasing gastric​
​pH with antacids can actually enhance absorption of acid-labile drugs by protecting them from​
​degradation in the stomach. Clinical pearl for Galen students: Always check whether a​
​medication should be taken with food or on an empty stomach — food can either enhance,​
​delay, or have no effect on absorption depending on the drug's physicochemical properties.​

,​ 3 (Pharmacokinetics – protein binding): A patient with severe liver cirrhosis has low serum​
Q
​albumin levels. The nurse anticipates that administration of warfarin, a highly protein-bound​
​drug, will result in which effect?​
​A. Decreased therapeutic effect due to increased protein binding​
​B. Increased risk of bleeding due to higher free drug concentration​
​C. Prolonged half-life due to decreased hepatic metabolism​
​D. Decreased drug distribution to target tissues​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: When albumin levels are low, fewer protein-binding sites are available, resulting in a​
​higher proportion of free (unbound) warfarin circulating in the plasma; free drug is​
​pharmacologically active and can cause enhanced anticoagulant effects and bleeding risk.​
​Distractor A is incorrect because decreased albumin actually reduces protein binding, not​
​increases it. Clinical pearl for Galen students: In patients with hypoalbuminemia (liver disease,​
​malnutrition, nephrotic syndrome), monitor closely for toxicity with highly protein-bound drugs​
​like warfarin, furosemide, and phenytoin — free drug levels increase even when total drug levels​
​appear normal.​
​Q4 (Pharmacokinetics – blood-brain barrier): The nurse is caring for a patient receiving​
​morphine for postoperative pain. Which statement best explains why morphine can cross the​
​blood-brain barrier while many other drugs cannot?​
​A. Morphine is highly ionized at physiological pH, facilitating passive diffusion.​
​B. Morphine is lipophilic enough to penetrate the lipid bilayer of the blood-brain barrier.​
​C. Morphine uses active transport carriers specific to opioid peptides.​
​D. Morphine is a small molecule that passes through fenestrations in capillary walls.​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: The blood-brain barrier consists of tight junctions between capillary endothelial cells​
​with a lipid bilayer membrane; lipophilic (lipid-soluble) drugs like morphine can diffuse across​
​this barrier, whereas hydrophilic (water-soluble) drugs are generally excluded. Distractor A is​
​incorrect because ionized drugs are typically water-soluble and cannot cross lipid membranes​
​easily — it is the non-ionized form that crosses. Clinical pearl for Galen students: Lipophilicity is​
​the key determinant of blood-brain barrier penetration; benzodiazepines, opioids, and general​
​anesthetics cross easily, while most antibiotics and polar drugs require special transport​
​mechanisms or inflamed meninges to enter the CNS.​
​Q5 (Pharmacokinetics – half-life): A drug has a half-life of 6 hours. Approximately how long will​
​it take for the drug to reach steady-state concentration with repeated dosing?​
​A. 6 hours​
​B. 12 hours​
​C. 24 hours​
​D. 30 hours​
​[CORRECT] D​
​Rationale: Steady-state concentration is typically reached after approximately 4 to 5 half-lives of​
​a drug; with a 6-hour half-life, this equates to 24–30 hours (5 × 6 = 30 hours), at which point​
​drug elimination equals drug administration and plasma levels plateau. Distractor C (24 hours =​
​4 half-lives) represents near-steady state but not full steady state. Clinical pearl for Galen​
​students: Use the "5 half-lives rule" to estimate when to expect therapeutic effects or when to​

,​ raw trough levels — for drugs with long half-lives (e.g., digoxin ~36 hours), loading doses may​
d
​be needed to achieve therapeutic levels quickly.​
​Q6 (Pharmacokinetics – renal elimination): A patient with chronic kidney disease (CrCl 25​
​mL/min) is prescribed gentamicin. The nurse knows that renal impairment will primarily affect​
​which pharmacokinetic parameter?​
​A. Absorption from the GI tract​
​B. Volume of distribution​
​C. Elimination half-life​
​D. First-pass metabolism​
​[CORRECT] C​
​Rationale: The kidneys are the primary route of elimination for aminoglycosides like gentamicin;​
​impaired renal function decreases glomerular filtration rate (GFR), leading to reduced drug​
​clearance, accumulation of the drug, and a prolonged elimination half-life. Distractor D is​
​incorrect because first-pass metabolism is a hepatic process, not renal. Clinical pearl for Galen​
​students: For renally eliminated drugs (aminoglycosides, vancomycin, digoxin, lithium), always​
​check creatinine clearance before dosing and adjust intervals or doses accordingly —​
​therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is essential for narrow therapeutic index drugs.​
​Q7 (Pharmacokinetics – placental transfer): A pregnant patient at 28 weeks gestation asks the​
​nurse whether the antibiotic she is taking will harm her baby. The nurse's best response is​
​based on which principle?​
​A. All drugs cross the placenta and cause teratogenic effects.​
​B. Only lipid-soluble, non-ionized, low-molecular-weight drugs readily cross the placenta.​
​C. The placenta is an absolute barrier that prevents all drug transfer to the fetus.​
​D. Only drugs with a molecular weight greater than 1000 Daltons can cross the placenta.​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: The placenta allows passive diffusion of lipid-soluble, non-ionized,​
​low-molecular-weight drugs; water-soluble, ionized, and high-molecular-weight drugs (like​
​heparin) do not readily cross, making this the most accurate explanation for drug transfer risk​
​assessment. Distractor A is incorrect because not all drugs cross the placenta, and not all that​
​cross are teratogenic. Clinical pearl for Galen students: When counseling pregnant patients,​
​remember the PLLR (Pregnancy and Lactation Labeling Rule) — the old A/B/C/D/X categories​
​were replaced in 2015 with narrative summaries; always consult LactMed for lactation safety​
​and the PLLR for pregnancy risk information.​
​Q8 (Pharmacokinetics – CYP450 metabolism): A patient taking warfarin is started on​
​fluconazole for a fungal infection. The nurse monitors for signs of bleeding because fluconazole​
​inhibits which enzyme system?​
​A. Cytochrome P450 3A4​
​B. Cytochrome P450 2D6​
​C. Cytochrome P450 2C9​
​D. Cytochrome P450 1A2​
​[CORRECT] C​
​Rationale: Warfarin is primarily metabolized by CYP2C9; fluconazole is a potent inhibitor of​
​CYP2C9 and CYP3A4, reducing warfarin metabolism and increasing its plasma concentration,​
​which elevates INR and bleeding risk. Distractor A is incorrect because while CYP3A4 is also​

, i​nhibited by fluconazole, warfarin's S-enantiomer (more potent) is specifically metabolized by​
​CYP2C9. Clinical pearl for Galen students: Memorize major CYP450 interactions — CYP3A4​
​(metabolizes ~50% of drugs), CYP2D6 (many antidepressants, beta-blockers), CYP2C9​
​(warfarin, NSAIDs), and CYP1A2 (theophylline, caffeine); inhibitors increase drug levels,​
​inducers decrease them.​
​Q9 (Pharmacokinetics – loading dose): A patient with atrial fibrillation is started on digoxin. The​
​physician orders a loading dose followed by a maintenance dose. The nurse understands that a​
​loading dose is given to:​
​A. Reduce the risk of adverse effects during initial therapy.​
​B. Achieve therapeutic plasma concentration more rapidly.​
​C. Compensate for poor oral bioavailability of the drug.​
​D. Prevent drug accumulation in patients with renal impairment.​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: A loading dose is a higher initial dose administered to rapidly achieve therapeutic​
​plasma drug concentrations; without it, drugs with long half-lives (like digoxin, ~36 hours) would​
​take many days to reach steady state at maintenance dosing alone. Distractor A is incorrect​
​because loading doses actually increase the risk of adverse effects due to higher initial plasma​
​levels. Clinical pearl for Galen students: Loading doses are commonly used for antibiotics​
​(vancomycin), antiarrhythmics (amiodarone, digoxin), and anticoagulants — always verify the​
​patient's renal and hepatic function before administering, as impaired clearance increases​
​toxicity risk.​
​Q10 (Pharmacokinetics – steady state): A nurse is teaching a patient about a new​
​antihypertensive medication with a half-life of 12 hours. The patient asks when they can expect​
​the full blood pressure-lowering effect. The nurse's best response is:​
​A. "You should see the full effect within 2 to 3 days."​
​B. "The full effect will occur after about 5 to 6 days."​
​C. "The medication works immediately after the first dose."​
​D. "It may take up to 2 weeks for the full effect."​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: With a 12-hour half-life, steady-state concentration is reached in approximately 4 to 5​
​half-lives (48–60 hours, or 2 to 2.5 days); however, the full clinical effect of antihypertensives​
​may take slightly longer as vascular remodeling occurs, making 5 to 6 days a reasonable clinical​
​estimate. Distractor A underestimates the time needed, and D overestimates it for this half-life.​
​Clinical pearl for Galen students: When counseling patients on new medications, explain that​
​steady state is a pharmacokinetic concept (4–5 half-lives), but clinical effects may take​
​additional time — never discontinue antihypertensives before steady state is reached unless​
​adverse effects occur.​
​Q11 (Pharmacodynamics – agonist vs. antagonist): Albuterol is prescribed for a patient with​
​asthma. The nurse understands that albuterol produces bronchodilation by acting as a:​
​A. Beta-1 receptor antagonist​
​B. Beta-2 receptor agonist​
​C. Alpha-1 receptor agonist​
​D. Muscarinic receptor antagonist​
​[CORRECT] B​

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Uploaded on
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