Pharmacology And The Nursing Process, 8th Edition Test Bank
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Chapter 02: Pharmacologic Principles
Lilley: Pharmacology and the Nursing Process, 8th Edition
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. The patient is receiving two different drugs. At current dosages and dosage forms, both drugs
are absorbed into the circulation in identical amounts. Which term is used to identify this
principle?
a. Bioequivalent
b. Synergistic
c. Prodrugs
d. Steady state
ANS: A
Two drugs absorbed into the circulation in the same amount (in specific dosage forms) have
the same bioavailability; thus, they are bioequivalent. A drugโs steady state is the physiologic
state in which the amount of drug removed via elimination is equal to the amount of drug
absorbed from each dose. The term synergistic refers to two drugs, given together, with a
resulting effect that is greater than the sum of the effects of each drug given alone. A prodrug
is an inactive drug dosage form that is converted to an active metabolite by various
biochemical reactions once it is inside the body.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Understanding (Comprehension) REF: p. 21
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: Implementation
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
2. When given an intravenous medication, the patient says to the nurse, โI usually take pills.
Why does this medication have to be given in the arm?โ What is the nurseโs best answer?
a. โThe medication will cause fewer adverse effects when given intravenously.โ
b. โThe intravenous medication will have delayed absorption into the bodyโs tissues.โ
c. โThe action of the medication will begin sooner when given intravenously.โ
d. โThere is a lower chance of allergic reactions when drugs are given intravenously.โ
ANS: C
An intravenous (IV) injection provides the fastest route of absorption. The IV route does not
affect the number of adverse effects, nor does it cause delayed tissue absorption (it results in
faster absorption). The IV route does not affect the number of allergic reactions.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Understanding (Comprehension) REF: p. 22
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: Implementation
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
3. The nurse is administering parenteral drugs. Which statement is true regarding parenteral
drugs?
a. Parenteral drugs bypass the first-pass effect.
b. Absorption of parenteral drugs is affected by reduced blood flow to the stomach.
c. Absorption of parenteral drugs is faster when the stomach is empty.
d. Parenteral drugs exert their effects while circulating in the bloodstream.
ANS: A
Drugs given by the parenteral route bypass the first-pass effect. Reduced blood flow to the
stomach and the presence of food in the stomach apply to enteral drugs (taken orally), not to
parenteral drugs. Parenteral drugs must be absorbed into cells and tissues from the circulation
before they can exert their effects; they do not exert their effects while circulating in the
bloodstream.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Understanding (Comprehension) REF: p. 22
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: General
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
4. When monitoring the patient receiving an intravenous infusion to reduce blood pressure, the
nurse notes that the patientโs blood pressure is extremely low, and the patient is lethargic and
difficult to awaken. This would be classified as which type of adverse drug reaction?
a. Adverse effect
b. Allergic reaction
c. Idiosyncratic reaction
d. Pharmacologic reaction
ANS: D
A pharmacologic reaction is an extension of a drugโs normal effects in the body. In this case,
the antihypertensive drug lowered the patientโs blood pressure levels too much. The other
options do not describe a pharmacologic reaction. An adverse effect is a predictable,
well-known adverse drug reaction that results in minor or no changes in patient management.
An allergic reaction (also known as a hypersensitivity reaction) involves the patientโs immune
system. An idiosyncratic reaction is unexpected and is defined as a genetically determined
abnormal response to normal dosages of a drug.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Understanding (Comprehension) REF: p. 32
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: General
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
5. The nurse is reviewing pharmacology terms for a group of newly graduated nurses. Which
sentence defines a drugโs half-life?
a. The time it takes for the drug to cause half of its therapeutic response
b. The time it takes for one half of the original amount of a drug to reach the target
cells
c. The time it takes for one half of the original amount of a drug to be removed from
the body
d. The time it takes for one half of the original amount of a drug to be absorbed into
the circulation
ANS: C
A drugโs half-life is the time it takes for one half of the original amount of a drug to be
removed from the body. It is a measure of the rate at which drugs are removed from the body.
The other options are incorrect definitions of half-life.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Understanding (Comprehension) REF: p. 27
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: General
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
6. When administering drugs, the nurse remembers that the duration of action of a drug is
defined as which of these?
a. The time it takes for a drug to elicit a therapeutic response
b. The amount of time needed to remove a drug from circulation
c. The time it takes for a drug to achieve its maximum therapeutic response
d. The time period at which a drugโs concentration is sufficient to cause a therapeutic
response
ANS: D
Duration of action is the time during which drug concentration is sufficient to elicit a
therapeutic response. The other options do not define duration of action. A drugโs onset of
action is the time it takes for the drug to elicit a therapeutic response. A drugโs peak effect is
the time it takes for the drug to reach its maximum therapeutic response. Elimination is the
length of time it takes to remove a drug from circulation.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Understanding (Comprehension) REF: p. 28
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: General
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
7. When reviewing the mechanism of action of a specific drug, the nurse reads that the drug
works by selective enzyme interaction. Which of these processes describes selective enzyme
interaction?
a. The drug alters cell membrane permeability.
b. The drugโs effectiveness within the cell walls of the target tissue is enhanced.
c. The drug is attracted to a receptor on the cell wall, preventing an enzyme from
binding to that receptor.
d. The drug binds to an enzyme molecule and inhibits or enhances the enzymeโs
action with the normal target cell.
ANS: D
With selective enzyme interaction, the drug attracts the enzymes to bind with the drug instead
of allowing the enzymes to bind with their normal target cells. As a result, the target cells are
protected from the action of the enzymes. This results in a drug effect. The actions described
in the other options do not occur with selective enzyme interactions.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Understanding (Comprehension) REF: p. 29
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: General
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
8. When administering a new medication to a patient, the nurse reads that it is highly protein
bound. Assuming that the patientโs albumin levels are normal, the nurse would expect which
result, as compared to a medication that is not highly protein bound?
a. Renal excretion will be faster.
b. The drug will be metabolized quickly.
c. The duration of action of the medication will be shorter.
d. The duration of action of the medication will be longer.
ANS: D
Drugs that are bound to plasma proteins are characterized by longer duration of action. Protein
binding does not make renal excretion faster, does not speed up drug metabolism, and does
not cause the duration of action to be shorter.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Applying (Application)
REF: pp. 24-25
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: Planning
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
9. The patient is experiencing chest pain and needs to take a sublingual form of nitroglycerin.
Where does the nurse instruct the patient to place the tablet?
a. Under the tongue
b. On top of the tongue
c. At the back of the throat
d. In the space between the cheek and the gum
ANS: A
Drugs administered via the sublingual route are placed under the tongue. Drugs administered
via the buccal route are placed in the space between the cheek and the gum; oral drugs are
swallowed. The other options are incorrect.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Understanding (Comprehension) REF: p. 22
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: Implementation
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
10. The nurse is administering medications to the patient who is in renal failure resulting from
end-stage renal disease. The nurse is aware that patients with kidney failure would most likely
have problems with which pharmacokinetic phase?
a. Absorption
b. Distribution
c. Metabolism
d. Excretion
ANS: D
The kidneys are the organs that are most responsible for drug excretion. Renal function does
not affect the absorption and distribution of a drug. Renal function may affect metabolism of
drugs to a small extent.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Applying (Application)
REF: p. 26
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: Assessment
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
11. A patient who has advanced cancer is receiving opioid medications around the clock to keep
him comfortable as he nears the end of his life. Which term best describes this type of
therapy?
a. Palliative therapy
b. Maintenance therapy
c. Empiric therapy
d. Supplemental therapy
ANS: A
The goal of palliative therapy is to make the patient as comfortable as possible. It is typically
used in the end stages of illnesses when all attempts at curative therapy have failed.
Maintenance therapy is used for the treatment of chronic illnesses such as hypertension.
Empiric therapy is based on clinical probabilities and involves drug administration when a
certain pathologic condition has an uncertain but high likelihood of occurrence based on the
patientโs initial presenting symptoms. Supplemental (or replacement therapy) supplies the
body with a substance needed to maintain normal function.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Understanding (Comprehension) REF: p. 30
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: Implementation
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
12. The patient is complaining of a headache and asks the nurse which over-the-counter
medication form would work the fastest to help reduce the pain. Which medication form will
the nurse suggest?
a. A capsule
b. A tablet
c. An enteric-coated tablet
d. A powder
ANS: D
Of the types of oral medications listed, the powder form would be absorbed the fastest, thus
having a faster onset. The tablet, the capsule, and, finally, the enteric-coated tablet would be
absorbed next, in that order.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Applying (Application)
REF: p. 20
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: Implementation
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
13. The nurse will be injecting a drug into the fatty tissue of the patientโs abdomen. Which route
does this describe?
a. Intradermal
b. Subcutaneous
c. Intramuscular
d. Transdermal
ANS: B
Injections into the fatty subcutaneous tissue under the dermal layer of skin are referred to as
subcutaneous injections. Injections under the more superficial skin layers immediately
underneath the epidermal layer of skin and into the dermal layer are known as intradermal
injections. Injections into the muscle beneath the subcutaneous fatty tissue are referred to as
intramuscular injections. Transdermal drugs are applied to the skin via an adhesive patch.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Remembering (Knowledge)
REF: p. 24
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: Implementation
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
MULTIPLE RESPONSE
1. Which drugs would be affected by the first-pass effect? (Select all that apply.)
a. Morphine given by IV push injection
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
Sublingual nitroglycerin tablets
Diphenhydramine (Benadryl) elixir
Levothyroxine (Synthroid) tablets
Transdermal nicotine patches
Esomeprazole (Nexium) capsules
Penicillin given by IV piggyback infusion
ANS: C, D, F
Orally administered drugs (elixirs, tablets, capsules) undergo the first-pass effect because they
are metabolized in the liver after being absorbed into the portal circulation from the small
intestine. IV medications (IV push and IV piggyback) enter the bloodstream directly and do
not go directly to the liver. Sublingual tablets and transdermal patches also enter the
bloodstream without going directly to the liver, thus avoiding the first-pass effect.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Applying (Application)
REF: p. 24
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: General
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
COMPLETION
1. A drug dose that delivers 250 mg has a half-life of 5 hours. Identify how much drug will
remain in the body after one half-life. _______
ANS:
125 mg
A drugโs half-life is the time required for one half of an administered dose of a drug to be
eliminated by the body, or the time it takes for the blood level of a drug to be reduced by 50%.
Therefore, one half of 250 mg equals 125 mg.
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Applying (Application)
REF: N/A
TOP: NURSING PROCESS: Implementation
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
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