MAXE EDIA DEM
MA Comprehensive Drug Reference — Classifications, Actions & Nursing Considerations
S A F E M E D I C AT I O N A D M I N I S T R AT I O N — Q U A L I T Y P AT I E N T C A R E
CERT
Medication Aide Exam Prep — Comprehensive Drug Reference
60+ COMMONLY PRESCRIBED MEDICATIONS: ANALGESICS, ANTIBIOTICS, CARDIAC, DIABETES, PSYCH, RESPIRATORY & MORE | 2026/2027
INSTITUTION State Medication Aide Certification Board COURSE CODE Medication Aide Exam Preparation
PROGRAM Medication Aide / Medication Technician ACADEMIC YEAR
EXAM TITLE Medication Aide State Certification Exam Prep TOTAL QUESTIONS 30 Questions
SUBJECT AREAS Drug Classes, Actions, Side Effects, Nursing Considerations FORMAT Multiple Choice — Select the Single Best Answer
EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
▸ Select the single best answer for each multiple-choice question.
▸ This comprehensive review covers 60+ commonly prescribed medications organized by drug class.
▸ Know generic and brand names, drug classifications, primary indications, and key nursing considerations.
▸ Topics include: analgesics, antibiotics, cardiovascular medications, diabetes medications, psychiatric medications, respiratory medications, GI medications, and supplements.
▸ Correct answers and detailed rationales appear below each question for state certification exam review purposes.
SECTION I — ANALGESICS, ANTIBIOTICS & ANTI-INFECTIVES Questions 1 – 8
1. Acetaminophen (Tylenol) is classified as a(n) _____ used to _____.
A. NSAID; reduce inflammation and pain
B. PAIN RELIEVER and FEVER REDUCER (analgesic/antipyretic); relieve mild to moderate pain and reduce fever
C. Opioid; treat moderate to severe pain
D. Antibiotic; treat bacterial infections
CORRECT ANSWER B — Acetaminophen is an analgesic (pain reliever) and antipyretic (fever reducer); it is NOT an NSAID and has minimal anti-inflammatory effects
RATIONALE Acetaminophen (Tylenol) is fundamentally different from NSAIDs (A): it does NOT reduce inflammation, does NOT irritate the stomach, and does NOT have
antiplatelet effects. Maximum daily dose: 3000-4000 mg to avoid HEPATOTOXICITY (liver damage). It is safer for the stomach than NSAIDs but overdose can cause
fatal liver failure. Acetaminophen is NOT an opioid (C — tramadol, morphine) and NOT an antibiotic (D). It is the preferred OTC analgesic for patients on
anticoagulants or with GI issues. Antidote for overdose: acetylcysteine (Mucomyst).
2. Ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin) and Naproxen (Aleve) belong to which drug class?
A. Opioid analgesics
B. NSAIDs (Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs) — analgesic, anti-inflammatory, and antipyretic properties
C. Acetaminophen derivatives
D. Corticosteroids
CORRECT ANSWER B — NSAIDs; ibuprofen and naproxen reduce pain, inflammation, and fever by inhibiting COX enzymes
RATIONALE NSAIDs work by inhibiting cyclooxygenase (COX-1 and COX-2) enzymes, blocking prostaglandin synthesis. Key side effects: (1) GI irritation/ulceration/bleeding — give
WITH FOOD or milk. (2) Increased bleeding risk (antiplatelet effect). (3) Nephrotoxicity — avoid in renal impairment. (4) Fluid retention. Naproxen (Aleve) is longer-
acting than ibuprofen. NSAIDs are NOT opioids (A), NOT acetaminophen derivatives (C), and NOT corticosteroids (D). They treat pain, inflammation, fever, arthritis,
and menstrual cramps. Black Box Warning: increased cardiovascular and GI risk.
3. Morphine is a _____ used to treat _____.
A. NSAID; mild pain
B. STRONG OPIOID pain medication; moderate to SEVERE pain
C. Antibiotic; bacterial infections
D. Antidepressant; chronic pain
CORRECT ANSWER B — Morphine is a strong opioid analgesic for moderate to SEVERE pain; it is a Schedule II controlled substance
RATIONALE Morphine is the prototype opioid analgesic. It binds to mu-opioid receptors in the CNS → analgesia, euphoria, sedation. Key considerations: (1) RESPIRATORY
DEPRESSION — the most serious side effect; monitor respiratory rate (hold if <12/min). (2) CONSTIPATION — almost universal; give stool softeners prophylactically.
(3) Nausea/vomiting. (4) Sedation, confusion. (5) Physical dependence with long-term use. (6) Controlled substance (Schedule II) — requires strict documentation,
secure storage, and witnessed wasting. Naloxone (Narcan) is the antidote for overdose. Tramadol is a weaker opioid-like medication for moderate pain.
4. Amoxicillin is a _____ antibiotic used to treat _____.
A. Cephalosporin; skin infections
B. PENICILLIN-TYPE antibiotic; bacterial infections such as UTIs, respiratory infections, and strep throat
C. Macrolide; atypical pneumonia
D. Fluoroquinolone; urinary tract infections only
CORRECT ANSWER B — Amoxicillin is a penicillin-type antibiotic effective against many gram-positive and some gram-negative bacteria
RATIONALE Amoxicillin (a penicillin) works by inhibiting bacterial cell wall synthesis → bactericidal. Key considerations: (1) Assess for PENICILLIN ALLERGY — cross-reactivity
with cephalosporins (1-10%). (2) Common side effects: diarrhea, nausea, rash. (3) Complete the FULL course — do not stop early. (4) Can reduce oral contraceptive
effectiveness. (5) Often combined with clavulanic acid (Augmentin) to overcome beta-lactamase resistance. Cephalexin/Keflex (A) is a cephalosporin.
Azithromycin/Z-pak (C) is a macrolide. Ciprofloxacin/Cipro (D) is a fluoroquinolone.