BSN 246 Pharmacology Quiz 1 Comprehensive Study Guide Drug
Absorption Empty Stomach Administration Pharmacokinetics
Pharmacodynamics Agonists Antagonists Sympathetic Nervous
System Clonidine Effects Adverse Reactions Ideal Drug Properties
Naloxone Mechanism Drug Development Phases Older Adult
Pharmacology Medication Errors Pharmacogenomics Dopamine
Effects P Glycoprotein Drug Interactions Nursing Implications
Patient Education Exam Questions Verified and Provided with
Complete A+ Graded Answers Latest Updated 2026
The prescriber has ordered an antibiotic for a patient with a bacterial infection. The nurse
provides patient education at discharge and instructs the patient to take the drug on an
empty stomach. When should the patient take the drug? (Select all that apply.)
-1 hour or more before a meal
-at least 2 hours after a meal
The absorption of some drugs can be significantly reduced by food; these drugs should be
taken on an empty stomach, which is 1 hour or more before a meal or at least 2 hours after a
meal. An 8-hour fast is not necessary; the patient does not need to miss a meal to take the
medication; and it is not reasonable to have the patient on thin liquids for 12 hours.
A nurse is teaching nursing students about the use of nonproprietary names for drugs. The
nurse tells them which fact about nonproprietary names?
they are assigned by the U.S adopted names council
, Nonproprietary, or generic, names are assigned by the U.S. Adopted Names Council, which
ensures that each drug has only one name. Trade names, or brand names, are approved by
the FDA and are easier to remember. Some nonproprietary names contain syllables that
identify the classification, although not all do. Drug names are not supposed to identify the
use for the drug, although some brand names do so.
A nurse is administering an agonist drug that acts on postganglionic neurons of the
sympathetic nervous system. Which response will the nurse expect to see?
increased cardiac output
Norepinephrine (NE) is the most common neurotransmitter released by all postganglionic
neurons of the sympathetic nervous system except those going to sweat glands where ACh is
the neurotransmitter. NE acts on alpha1, alpha2, and beta1 receptors to increase the force
and rate of cardiac contraction, thus increasing cardiac output. ACh would increase sweating.
Bronchodilation occurs when epinephrine activates beta2 receptors on bronchial smooth
muscle. NE affects alpha1 receptors to dilate the pupils.
A nurse is preparing to administer a medication and learns that it is a nonselective agonist
drug. What does the nurse understand about this drug?
it directly activates receptors to affect many physiologic processes
Drugs that directly activate receptors are called agonists, so this drug will directly activate the
receptor site. Drugs that are nonselective activate a variety of receptor sites. A selective
agonist would directly activate specific receptors to affect a specific process. An antagonist
would prevent receptor activation.
A patient who has been taking clonidine [Catapres] for several weeks complains of drowsiness
and constipation. What will the nurse do?