Comprehensive Test Bank (2026
Edition)|| Questions And Answers
With Rationales/Graded A+/2026
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Total Questions: 85
Format: Multiple Choice
Instructions: Select the best answer. Rationales are provided for review.
Section 1: Pharmacokinetics & Pharmacodynamics (Q1–10)
1. A drug with high first-pass effect is best administered via which route?
A. Oral
B. Sublingual
C. Intravenous
D. Rectal
Rationale: First-pass effect (hepatic metabolism) reduces oral bioavailability. IV
route bypasses the liver entirely.
2. The time required for a drug to reach steady state is approximately:
A. 1 half-life
B. 2 half-lives
C. 4–5 half-lives
D. 10 half-lives
Rationale: Steady state is achieved after ~4–5 half-lives, regardless of dosing
interval.
3. Which receptor type directly opens ion channels?
A. G-protein coupled receptor
,B. Ligand-gated ion channel
C. Enzyme-linked receptor
D. Intracellular receptor
Rationale: Ligand-gated ion channels (e.g., nicotinic, GABA-A) mediate rapid
synaptic transmission.
4. A drug with a narrow therapeutic index requires:
A. Less frequent monitoring
B. Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM)
C. Loading dose only
D. Enteric coating
Rationale: Narrow TI = small margin between efficacy and toxicity (e.g., warfarin,
lithium, digoxin).
5. Which phase of drug metabolism involves conjugation?
A. Phase I (oxidation)
B. Phase II (conjugation)
C. Absorption
D. Distribution
Rationale: Phase II adds hydrophilic groups (glucuronide, sulfate) to enhance
excretion.
6. Bioavailability of an IV drug is always:
A. <100%
B. 100%
C. Dependent on food
D. Variable
Rationale: IV administration delivers 100% of drug to systemic circulation.
7. Regarding drug distribution, a drug with high plasma protein binding will:
A. Have a large volume of distribution
B. Remain mostly in vascular space
C. Be rapidly excreted
D. Cross BBB easily
Rationale: High protein binding (e.g., warfarin) keeps drug in circulation, limiting
distribution.
, 8. Which CYP450 enzyme is most commonly involved in drug-drug
interactions?
A. CYP3A4
B. CYP2D6
C. CYP1A2
D. CYP2C9
Rationale: CYP3A4 metabolizes >50% of drugs (statins, calcium channel blockers,
etc.).
9. A patient develops tolerance to morphine. This is most likely due to:
A. Increased excretion
B. Receptor downregulation
C. Decreased absorption
D. Enzyme induction
Rationale: Chronic opioid use causes desensitization and internalization of μ-
opioid receptors.
10. The volume of distribution (Vd) of digoxin is high. This indicates:
A. High plasma protein binding
B. Extensive tissue binding
C. Poor absorption
D. Rapid clearance
Rationale: High Vd (>500 L for digoxin) means drug concentrates in tissues
(muscle, heart).
Section 2: Autonomic Nervous System (Q11–20)
11. A patient receives atropine preoperatively. Expected effect is:
A. Bradycardia
B. Tachycardia
C. Miosis
D. Bronchospasm
Rationale: Atropine blocks muscarinic receptors → increased HR (used to prevent
bradycardia during surgery).