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NUR 210/ NUR210 Exam 2 – Principles of Pharmacology Guide ACTUAL EXAM 2026/2027 | Principles of Pharmacology Guide | Verified Q&A | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded

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Pass your NUR 210 Exam 2 with this 2026/2027 complete actual exam for Principles of Pharmacology Guide at Galen. This 100% verified Q&A bank covers autonomic nervous system drugs, cardiovascular and diuretic medications, pain management analgesics, antibiotic and antimicrobial agents, and endocrine pharmacology. Each question includes a detailed rationale to enhance clinical application. Backed by our Pass Guarantee. Download now.

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Instelling
NUR 210/ NUR210
Vak
NUR 210/ NUR210

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

​ UR 210/ NUR210 Exam 2 – Principles​
N
​of Pharmacology Guide ACTUAL EXAM​
​2026/2027 | Principles of​
​Pharmacology Guide | Verified Q&A |​
​Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded​
​ =======================================================================​
=
​========​
​PART A – MULTIPLE CHOICE (Q1–60)​
​========================================================================​
​========​

*​ *Q1 (Anticoagulants – warfarin monitoring):**​
​A 68-year-old patient with atrial fibrillation is prescribed warfarin. Which INR range indicates​
​therapeutic anticoagulation for this indication?​
​A) 1.5–2.0​
​B) 2.0–3.0​
​C) 2.5–3.5​
​D) 3.0–4.0​

*​ *[CORRECT]** B​
​*Rationale: The American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines​
​recommend an INR of 2.0–3.0 for atrial fibrillation and most venous thromboembolism​
​indications. Option A (1.5–2.0) is subtherapeutic and increases stroke risk. Option C (2.5–3.5) is​
​reserved for mechanical heart valves. Option D (3.0–4.0) carries excessive bleeding risk without​
​additional benefit for this indication. Clinical pearl: Always verify the specific indication when​
​interpreting INR goals; mechanical mitral valves require higher targets than aortic valves.*​

*​ *Q2 (Anticoagulants – heparin monitoring):**​
​A patient receiving unfractionated heparin for a pulmonary embolism has an aPTT of 48​
​seconds (control 30 seconds). Which action is most appropriate?​
​A) Increase the heparin infusion rate by 2 units/kg/hour​
​B) Continue the current heparin dose; the aPTT is therapeutic​
​C) Decrease the heparin infusion rate and recheck in 2 hours​
​D) Discontinue heparin and initiate a direct oral anticoagulant​

,*​ *[CORRECT]** B​
​*Rationale: Therapeutic aPTT for unfractionated heparin is 1.5–2.5 times the control (45–75​
​seconds for a 30-second control). An aPTT of 48 seconds falls within this therapeutic range.​
​Option A would cause supratherapeutic anticoagulation and bleeding risk. Option C is​
​unnecessary as the value is therapeutic, not supratherapeutic. Option D is inappropriate during​
​acute treatment when heparin is preferred for rapid onset and reversibility. Clinical pearl: Always​
​use the institution-specific therapeutic range as reagent sensitivity varies; obtain aPTT 6 hours​
​after any rate change; transition to warfarin requires 5 days of overlap with therapeutic aPTT​
​and INR 2.0–3.0 for at least 24 hours.*​

*​ *Q3 (Anticoagulants – DOAC reversal):**​
​A patient on apixaban presents with life-threatening gastrointestinal bleeding. Which reversal​
​agent is appropriate?​
​A) Vitamin K 10 mg IV​
​B) Protamine sulfate 50 mg IV​
​C) Andexanet alfa (Factor Xa decoy)​
​D) Fresh frozen plasma 2 units​

*​ *[CORRECT]** C​
​*Rationale: Andexanet alfa is the FDA-approved specific reversal agent for Factor Xa inhibitors​
​(apixaban, rivaroxaban, edoxaban). It acts as a decoy that binds and sequesters the drug.​
​Option A (vitamin K) reverses warfarin only (requires synthesis of new clotting factors). Option B​
​(protamine) reverses heparin only by forming a stable complex. Option D (FFP) contains all​
​clotting factors but is less effective than 4-factor PCC for warfarin reversal and has no role in​
​DOAC reversal. Clinical pearl: Idarucizumab (Praxbind) is the specific reversal agent for​
​dabigatran (direct thrombin inhibitor); 4F-PCC can be used off-label for Factor Xa inhibitor​
​reversal if andexanet alfa is unavailable.*​

*​ *Q4 (Beta-blockers – adverse effects):**​
​A patient on metoprolol for hypertension reports several symptoms. Which adverse effect is the​
​nurse most concerned about?​
​A) Mild fatigue and decreased exercise tolerance​
​B) Heart rate of 52 bpm at rest​
​C) Blood glucose of 68 mg/dL without adrenergic warning symptoms​
​D) Mild peripheral edema in the ankles​

*​ *[CORRECT]** C​
​*Rationale: Beta-blockers block glycogenolysis and mask the adrenergic warning symptoms​
​(tremors, tachycardia, sweating) of hypoglycemia while preserving sweating (cholinergic). This​
​places diabetic patients at risk for unrecognized severe hypoglycemia. Option A is expected and​
​usually tolerable. Option B (HR 52) is mild bradycardia and acceptable if asymptomatic. Option​
​D is not a beta-blocker adverse effect; it is associated with calcium channel blockers​
​(amlodipine). Clinical pearl: Non-selective beta-blockers (propranolol, nadolol) are absolutely​

,​ ontraindicated in asthma; even cardioselective agents (metoprolol, atenolol) lose selectivity at​
c
​higher doses and can precipitate bronchospasm.*​

*​ *Q5 (ACE inhibitors – cough and angioedema):**​
​A patient on lisinopril develops a persistent dry cough. Which mechanism explains this adverse​
​effect?​
​A) Histamine release from mast cells in the respiratory tract​
​B) Bradykinin and substance P accumulation due to ACE inhibition​
​C) Direct irritation of the cough reflex center in the medulla​
​D) Increased prostaglandin E2 production in the lungs​

*​ *[CORRECT]** B​
​*Rationale: ACE inhibitors block the conversion of angiotensin I to II but also inhibit bradykinin​
​degradation; accumulated bradykinin and substance P stimulate cough receptors in the​
​respiratory tract. This occurs in 5–20% of patients and is more common in women and​
​nonsmokers. Option A describes histamine-mediated reactions (penicillin allergy). Option C​
​describes central cough suppression (dextromethorphan mechanism). Option D is incorrect;​
​ACE inhibitors actually reduce prostaglandin production. Clinical pearl: Switching to an ARB​
​(losartan, valsartan) resolves cough in 90% of patients as ARBs do not affect bradykinin​
​metabolism; angioedema (airway-threatening swelling) requires immediate discontinuation and​
​lifetime avoidance of all ACE inhibitors.*​

*​ *Q6 (Calcium channel blockers – adverse effects):**​
​A patient on amlodipine for hypertension develops bilateral ankle edema. Which mechanism​
​explains this finding?​
​A) Sodium and water retention from mineralocorticoid receptor activation​
​B) Arteriolar vasodilation exceeds venous vasodilation, increasing capillary hydrostatic pressure​
​C) Right-sided heart failure from negative inotropic effects​
​D) Lymphatic obstruction from drug-induced inflammation​

*​ *[CORRECT]** B​
​*Rationale: Dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers (amlodipine, nifedipine) preferentially​
​dilate arterioles over venules, increasing hydrostatic pressure in capillary beds and causing fluid​
​extravasation into interstitial tissues (peripheral edema). This is NOT responsive to diuretics.​
​Option A describes mineralocorticoid effects (spironolactone deficiency or primary​
​hyperaldosteronism). Option C describes right heart failure (cor pulmonale, tricuspid​
​regurgitation). Option D is not a CCB mechanism. Clinical pearl: Adding an ACE inhibitor or​
​ARB (which dilate both arterioles and venules) reduces CCB-induced edema by 50–70%;​
​switching to a non-dihydropyridine CCB (verapamil, diltiazem) may also help.*​

*​ *Q7 (Diuretics – hypokalemia):**​
​A patient on furosemide 40 mg twice daily has a serum potassium of 3.0 mEq/L. Which ECG​
​finding is most concerning?​
​A) Peaked T waves​

, ​ ) Flattened T waves and prominent U waves​
B
​C) Shortened PR interval​
​D) Delta waves and short PR interval​

*​ *[CORRECT]** B​
​*Rationale: Loop diuretics (furosemide, bumetanide) cause hypokalemia by increasing distal​
​tubular sodium delivery, which drives potassium secretion via aldosterone-sensitive​
​mechanisms. Hypokalemia causes flattened T waves, ST depression, and prominent U waves​
​(best seen in V2–V3); severe hypokalemia (<2.5 mEq/L) can cause ventricular arrhythmias.​
​Option A (peaked T waves) indicates hyperkalemia. Option C is not associated with electrolyte​
​abnormalities. Option D describes Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. Clinical pearl: Potassium​
​replacement for loop diuretic-induced hypokalemia should include magnesium repletion​
​(hypomagnesemia causes refractory hypokalemia by impairing ROMK channel function);​
​consider a potassium-sparing diuretic (spironolactone, triamterene) for chronic management.*​

*​ *Q8 (Antidysrhythmics – amiodarone toxicity):**​
​A patient on long-term amiodarone presents with dyspnea, nonproductive cough, and bilateral​
​interstitial infiltrates on chest X-ray. Which adverse effect is most likely?​
​A) Acute pulmonary embolism​
​B) Amiodarone-induced pulmonary toxicity (interstitial pneumonitis)​
​C) Congestive heart failure exacerbation​
​D) Community-acquired pneumonia​

*​ *[CORRECT]** B​
​*Rationale: Amiodarone contains iodine (37% by weight) and accumulates in adipose tissue and​
​organs, causing dose-dependent pulmonary toxicity (interstitial pneumonitis, organizing​
​pneumonia, ARDS) in 1–5% of patients, especially with doses >400 mg/day, age >60, or​
​pre-existing lung disease. Baseline and periodic chest X-rays and pulmonary function tests are​
​recommended. Option A would show wedge-shaped infarcts and elevated D-dimer. Option C​
​would show cardiomegaly and pleural effusions. Option D would show lobar consolidation and​
​respond to antibiotics. Clinical pearl: Amiodarone also causes thyroid dysfunction (hypo- or​
​hyperthyroidism), hepatotoxicity (baseline and periodic LFTs), corneal microdeposits​
​(reversible), photosensitivity, and peripheral neuropathy; baseline ECG, thyroid function, LFTs,​
​and chest X-ray are required before initiation.*​

*​ *Q9 (Antiplatelets – aspirin adverse effects):**​
​A 16-year-old patient with influenza is prescribed aspirin for fever. Which serious adverse effect​
​is the nurse most concerned about?​
​A) Gastrointestinal bleeding​
​B) Reye syndrome (acute encephalopathy and fatty liver)​
​C) Acute kidney injury​
​D) Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura​

​**[CORRECT]** B​

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