Pharmacology Concepts and Terminology
Anesthesia
Analgesia
Behavior Drugs
Nervous System Drugs
100

AU is the abbreviation for this.

What is "both ears?"

100

This short-acting, lipophilic intravenous anesthetic is frequently used for induction and must be given slowly to avoid apnea.

What is propofol?

100

In this part of the pain pathway, a mechanical, chemical, or thermal stimulus is converted into a nerve impulse.

What is transduction?

100

This is the only SSRI FDA-approved for use in dogs.

What is fluoxetine?

100

This group of 'minor tranquilizers,' including diazepam and midazolam, are used for sedation, muscle relaxation, and as anticonvulsants.

What are benzodiazepines?

200

This drug administration route always results in 100% absorption.

What is intravenous?

200

Local anesthetics mostly impact this part of the pain pathway.

What is transmission?

200

These are the four cardinal signs of inflammation.

What are redness, heat, pain, and swelling?

200

This is a life-threatening phenomenon that can occur when certain drugs are combined with SSRIs. Clinical signs include restlessness, tremors, dilated pupils, hyperthermia.

What is serotonin syndrome?

200

This α₂-agonist is commonly used as a sedative in horses but is noted for its emetic properties in cats.

What is xylazine?

300

This term refers to the time required for the concentration of a drug in the body to be reduced by exactly 50%

What is half-life?

300

Inadvertent IV administration of these can cause CNS excitement, cardiac arrythmias and severe respiratory depression.

What are local anesthetics?

300

This NMDA receptor antagonist impacts the modulation step of the pain pathway and can prevent wind-up.

What is ketamine?

300

Behavioral drugs are often used in combination with this approach when addressing conditions such as separation anxiety, phobias, psychogenic alopecia, or urine marking.

What is behavior modification?

300

This phenothiazine tranquilizer provides sedation but no analgesia and is known for causing vasodilation and hypotension in many species.

What is acepromazine?

400

In drug dosing, this condition is reached when the rate of drug administration exactly equals the rate of drug elimination.

What is steady state?

400

This measurement of anesthetic potency represents the concentration of gas that prevents movement in 50% of patients.

What is minimum alveolar concentration, or MAC?

400

This enzyme facilitates the production of prostaglandins via the arachidonic acid cascade.

What is cyclooxygenase?

400

This tricyclic antidepressant is FDA-approved for use in separation anxiety in dogs.

What is clomipramine?

400

This barbiturate anticonvulsant induces, or increases, it's own metabolism, as well as the metabolism of other drugs.

What is phenobarbital?

500

This pharmacological phenomenon occurs when the concentration of an orally administered drug is greatly reduced by the liver before it can reach systemic circulation.

What is first-pass effect?

500

Because this is higher in isoflurane, as compared to sevoflurane, onset and recovery from anesthesia are slower.

What is solubility?

500

This enzyme in the arachidonic acid cascade is targeted by glucocorticoids such as prednisone.

What is LOX (or lipoxygenase)?

500

This SARI (Serotonin Antagonist and Reuptake Inhibitor) is a go-to for post-surgical confinement; it works by blocking 5-HT2A receptors, providing both anxiety relief and mild sedation

What is trazodone?

500

This is the mechanism of action of benzodiazepines such as alprazolam and midazolam.

What is enhancement of the inhibitory effect of GABA?

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