NURS 5344 - PHARM STUDY GUIDE QUIZ 1. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. COMPLETE SOLUTIONS GUIDE.
MODULE 1
1. What are the BON rules and regulations for
... [Show More] prescriptive authority for the advance
practice nurse?
1. Texas is very restricted
2. Describe the pharmacokinetic processes of absorption, distribution, metabolism and
elimination and how differences in these areas affect drug action.
1. Absorption
1. Drug’s movement from the site of administration into the blood.
2. Distribution
1. Drug’s movement from the blood into the interstitial space of
tissues and from there into cells.
3. Metabolism
1. Biotransformation is the enzymatically mediated alteration of drug
structure.
4. Elimination
1. Combination of metabolism and excretion
3. Compare and contrast pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of special
populations—pediatrics, older adults and those that are pregnant.
1. Pediatrics—they have organ immaturity, elderly—they have organ degeneration,
loss of nephrons, excretion of drug is decreased and you have to give this
population a lower dose of medication. Medication can pass through milk of
lactating females.
4. Analyze a drug interaction to determine an appropriate course of action.
1. Basic mechanism of drug-drug interactions through pharmacokinetic interactions
are altered absorption, altered distribution, altered metabolism, and altered renal
excretion.
5. Identify medications with a narrow therapeutic index requiring drug level
monitoring.
1.
6. Discuss the effect of ionization and pH on absorption.
1. Drugs that are weak acids are best absorbed in acidic environments. Acidic drugs
accumulate on the alkaline side, basic drugs accumulate on the acidic side known
as ion trapping. Ionization of the drugs is pH dependent, when the pH and the
fluid on one side of the membrane differs from the pH on the other side, drug
molecules tend to accumulate on the side where the pH most favors ionization.
7. Discuss factors affecting drug distribution.
1. Competition for protein binding and alteration of extracellular pH
8. Discuss barriers affecting drug distribution—such as placental membrane, blood
brain barrier and volume of distribution.
1. Placental membrane: drugs are easily passed through the placental membrance
2. Blood brain barrier: the PGP pumps drugs back into the blood and thereby limits
their access to the brain.
3. Volume of distribution:
9. Discuss the “first-pass effect”—what effect can this have on distribution of a drug?
1. Rapid hepatic inactivation of certain oral drugs. When drugs are absorbed by the
GI tract, they are carried directly to the liver through the hepatic portal vein
before entering the systemic circulation. If the capacity of the liver to metabolize
the drug is extremely high, this drug can be completely inactivated on its first pass
through the liver.
10. Discuss the significance of the Cytochrome P450 system on metabolism of drugs.
1. It is a group of 12 closely related enzyme families. CYP1, CYP2, CYP3
metabolize drugs [Show Less]