Exam: Medication Administration, GI Safety,
Drug Interactions, Buccal & IV Routes, Lipid
vs. Water Solubility, Inducers & Inhibitors,
Half-Life & Plateau, Loading Dose, Drug
Development Phases, FDA Approval,
Therapeutics vs. Pharmacotherapeutics,
Controlled Substances, Adverse Drug
Reactions, Pharmacokinetics,
Pharmacodynamics, Receptor Activity,
Pregnancy Categories, Hepatotoxicity,
Teratogenicity, Patient Education, Cultural
Considerations, Pain Management,
Dependence & Withdrawal, ABCs in Nursing
Care Exam Questions Verified and Complete
with A+ Graded Rationales Latest Updated
2026
What would you do if patient comes to you with ulcer issue (GI bleed) and asks for Motrin for
their headache pain?
Explain to the patient the benefits vs. the risks. Motrin (ibuprofen) thins the blood and
they can have a GI erosion / risk of bleeding.
A husband was prescribed PO medication for back pain. His wife wants to take his medication
after she also hurt her back. What is wrong with this scenario?
For PO medication, there is a gender difference and they can have different side affects when
taking the same PO med.
Buccal
between the gum and cheek
Why would you change a med that a patient is receiving from water to lipid solubility?
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, Lipid solubility is fast-acting and can cross the membrane easily. You can deliver meds to the site
of action.
Water soluble is slower and needs to be bound and carried across the cell membrane.
Can make a big difference in how it affects patient.
Inducer
Drugs that act on the liver to increase the rate of metabolism and the plasma drug level falls.
Less of the drug at the site of action
Inhibitor
Drugs that act on on the liver to decrease the rate of metabolism and leads to an increase
adverse effect.
Will have more drugs to the site of action.
What is drug half-life?
the time required for the amount of drug in the body to decrease by 50%
If Morphine has a half-life of 3 hours and you take 50mg, how many mg will be left in 3 hours?
25 mg
How do you reach plateau?
take 4 'loading doses', then maintain daily
loading dose
the amount of medication you give to reach plateau or the highest concentration.
used for drugs with long half life to achieve plateau quickly.
i.e. 4 doses within 24 hours - 4 increments.
ex) Z pack, Digoxin
Phase- preclinical testing
1-5 years. Testing in animals for Toxicity, pharmacokinetics, possible useful effects.
Phase I of drug development
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