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

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Ace your NUR 210 Exam 1 with this 2026/2027 complete actual exam for Principles of Pharmacology Guide at Galen. This 100% verified Q&A resource covers essential topics: drug classifications and prototypes, receptor theory and drug action, dose-response relationships, routes of medication administration, and nursing implications for safe drug therapy. Every answer includes a detailed rationale to build a strong pharmacology foundation. Backed by our Pass Guarantee. Download now

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Instelling
NUR 210/ NUR210
Vak
NUR 210/ NUR210

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

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

​ ART A – MULTIPLE CHOICE (Q1–60)​
P
​Q1 (Pharmacokinetics – first-pass effect):​
​A nurse is teaching a patient about why oral morphine requires a higher dose than intravenous​
​morphine. Which statement by the nurse best explains the first-pass effect?​
​A) "The liver metabolizes a portion of the drug before it reaches systemic circulation."​
​B) "The kidneys filter out most of the drug before it can act on receptors in the brain."​
​C) "The stomach acid destroys approximately 50% of the drug before absorption occurs."​
​D) "The blood-brain barrier prevents oral drugs from entering the central nervous system."​
​[CORRECT] A​
​Rationale: The first-pass effect refers to hepatic metabolism of a drug after absorption from the​
​GI tract but before reaching systemic circulation, which significantly reduces bioavailability of​
​orally administered drugs like morphine. Option B is incorrect because renal filtration occurs​
​after systemic circulation, not before. Option C is incorrect because stomach acid does not​
​destroy 50% of morphine; the liver is responsible for first-pass metabolism. Option D is incorrect​
​because the blood-brain barrier affects CNS entry after systemic circulation, not oral​
​bioavailability.​
​Q2 (Pharmacokinetics – factors affecting absorption):​
​A patient with chronic heart failure is prescribed furosemide. The nurse knows that which factor​
​will most likely DECREASE the rate of oral drug absorption in this patient?​
​A) Increased gastric motility​
​B) Decreased splanchnic blood flow​
​C) Increased surface area of the small intestine​
​D) Alkaline urine pH​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: In heart failure, decreased cardiac output reduces splanchnic (intestinal) blood flow,​
​which slows the rate of drug absorption from the GI tract because less blood is available to carry​
​absorbed drug into systemic circulation. Option A is incorrect because increased gastric motility​
​would actually decrease absorption time, not decrease the rate. Option C is incorrect because​
​increased surface area enhances, not decreases, absorption. Option D is incorrect because​
​urine pH affects renal elimination, not GI absorption.​

,​ 3 (Pharmacokinetics – protein binding):​
Q
​A 78-year-old patient with low serum albumin is prescribed warfarin. The nurse should monitor​
​closely for which potential effect?​
​A) Decreased drug efficacy due to reduced plasma concentration​
​B) Increased risk of bleeding due to higher free (unbound) drug concentration​
​C) Increased protein binding causing drug accumulation in tissues​
​D) Decreased volume of distribution leading to subtherapeutic levels​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: Warfarin is highly protein-bound (approximately 99%); when albumin is low, less drug​
​is bound to protein, leaving more free (unbound, pharmacologically active) drug available to​
​exert anticoagulant effects and increasing bleeding risk. Option A is incorrect because free drug​
​concentration increases, not decreases. Option C is incorrect because low albumin decreases,​
​not increases, protein binding. Option D is incorrect because volume of distribution is not the​
​primary concern; the concern is increased free fraction and toxicity.​
​Q4 (Pharmacokinetics – half-life):​
​A drug has a half-life of 6 hours. Approximately how long will it take 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 5 half-lives; with a​
​6-hour half-life, 5 × 6 = 30 hours. Option A represents one half-life (50% of steady state). Option​
​B represents two half-lives (75% of steady state). Option C represents four half-lives (94% of​
​steady state). Clinical practice accepts 5 half-lives as the time to reach steady state.​
​Q5 (Pharmacokinetics – CYP450):​
​The nurse is reviewing a patient's medication list and notes that the patient takes simvastatin​
​and recently started taking clarithromycin. What is the nurse's primary concern?​
​A) Clarithromycin inhibits CYP3A4, increasing simvastatin levels and risk of rhabdomyolysis​
​B) Clarithromycin induces CYP3A4, decreasing simvastatin effectiveness​
​C) Simvastatin inhibits clarithromycin metabolism, causing antibiotic toxicity​
​D) The combination causes additive hypotension​
​[CORRECT] A​
​Rationale: Clarithromycin is a potent CYP3A4 inhibitor; simvastatin is a CYP3A4 substrate.​
​Inhibition increases simvastatin plasma levels, raising the risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis,​
​a potentially fatal muscle breakdown. Option B is incorrect because clarithromycin inhibits, not​
​induces, CYP3A4. Option C is incorrect because simvastatin does not inhibit clarithromycin​
​metabolism. Option D is incorrect because neither drug significantly affects blood pressure.​
​Q6 (Pharmacokinetics – renal elimination):​
​A patient with chronic kidney disease (GFR 25 mL/min) is prescribed a drug that is 90%​
​eliminated unchanged by the kidneys. What is the nurse's priority action?​
​A) Administer the drug with food to enhance absorption​
​B) Recommend an increased dose to compensate for reduced elimination​

, ​ ) Notify the prescriber to discuss dose reduction or extended dosing interval​
C
​D) Monitor liver function tests because renal impairment increases hepatic metabolism​
​[CORRECT] C​
​Rationale: For drugs primarily eliminated by the kidneys, significantly reduced GFR (normal >90​
​mL/min) causes drug accumulation and toxicity; the nurse must notify the prescriber to adjust​
​the dose or extend the dosing interval based on renal function. Option A is incorrect because​
​absorption is not the issue; elimination is. Option B is incorrect because increasing the dose​
​would worsen accumulation and toxicity. Option D is incorrect because while some hepatic​
​compensation may occur, it is insufficient to prevent toxicity of a 90% renally eliminated drug.​
​Q7 (Pharmacokinetics – volume of distribution):​
​A drug has a very large volume of distribution (Vd > 200 L). What does this indicate to the​
​nurse?​
​A) The drug is highly concentrated in the plasma and will have a short duration of action.​
​B) The drug is extensively distributed into tissues and may have a prolonged effect.​
​C) The drug is rapidly metabolized by the liver and requires frequent dosing.​
​D) The drug is poorly absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract.​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: A large volume of distribution indicates extensive tissue distribution beyond plasma​
​volume (which is approximately 3 L for a 70 kg adult); drugs with large Vd (e.g., digoxin,​
​antidepressants) sequester in tissues and may have prolonged effects and half-lives. Option A​
​is incorrect because large Vd means low plasma concentration, not high. Option C is incorrect​
​because metabolism rate is independent of Vd. Option D is incorrect because absorption and​
​distribution are separate pharmacokinetic processes.​
​Q8 (Pharmacokinetics – blood-brain barrier):​
​Which characteristic allows a drug to most easily cross the blood-brain barrier?​
​A) High molecular weight and hydrophilic properties​
​B) Low lipid solubility and protein binding​
​C) Small molecular size and high lipid solubility​
​D) High degree of ionization at physiological pH​
​[CORRECT] C​
​Rationale: The blood-brain barrier consists of tight endothelial junctions that restrict passage of​
​large, polar, or ionized molecules; small, lipid-soluble (lipophilic), non-ionized drugs cross most​
​easily by passive diffusion. Option A is incorrect because large, hydrophilic molecules cannot​
​cross. Option B is incorrect because low lipid solubility prevents barrier penetration. Option D is​
​incorrect because ionized forms are water-soluble and cannot cross lipid membranes.​
​Q9 (Pharmacodynamics – agonist vs. antagonist):​
​A patient receives naloxone after an opioid overdose. The nurse understands that naloxone is​
​effective because it is a:​
​A) Full agonist at mu-opioid receptors​
​B) Competitive antagonist at mu-opioid receptors​
​C) Partial agonist at mu-opioid receptors​
​D) Non-competitive antagonist at mu-opioid receptors​
​[CORRECT] B​

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Instelling
NUR 210/ NUR210
Vak
NUR 210/ NUR210

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