Opiates & Cannabinoids
Serotonin
Dopamine
Skeletal Muscle Relaxants
Miscellaneous
100

A postoperative patient develops analgesia and respiratory depression due to decreased Ca²⁺ influx and increased K⁺ efflux in spinal neurons.

What is the mu opioid receptor?

100

A chemotherapy patient develops severe nausea and vomiting due to serotonin acting on ligand-gated ion channels in the area postrema. A drug is given that prevents Na⁺ influx and K⁺ efflux at this receptor.

What is ondansetron?

100

A woman with galactorrhea and amenorrhea is treated with a drug that stimulates inhibitory dopamine receptors in the pituitary.

What is bromocriptine?

100

A trauma patient requires rapid paralysis for intubation and develops fasciculations and hyperkalemia after drug administration.

What is succinylcholine?

100

A patient with generalized tonic-clonic seizures is given an IV drug that immediately stops the seizure but must be followed by another agent to prevent recurrence.

What is a benzodiazepine (lorazepam or diazepam)?

200

An opioid causes mydriasis instead of miosis due to anticholinergic activity.

What is meperidine?

200

A depressed patient develops hypertension and tachycardia due to increased synaptic norepinephrine and serotonin from reuptake blockade.

What are SNRIs?

200

A Parkinson patient receives a drug that blocks peripheral conversion of levodopa to dopamine, increasing CNS dopamine levels.

What is carbidopa?

200

A cosmetic procedure drug blocks SNARE proteins and prevents acetylcholine release at the neuromuscular junction.

What is botulinum toxin?

200

A patient undergoing surgery develops sudden muscle rigidity, rising CO₂, tachycardia, and hyperthermia after receiving inhaled anesthetics and succinylcholine.

What is malignant hyperthermia?

300

An opioid-dependent patient is given a partial agonist and immediately develops withdrawal symptoms.

What is buprenorphine?

300

A patient with PTSD nightmares is given a drug that blocks alpha-1 receptors, reducing sympathetic tone during sleep.

What is prazosin?

300

A patient with Parkinson disease is given a drug that inhibits COMT and crosses the blood–brain barrier to reduce dopamine breakdown centrally.

What is tolcapone?

300

A patient receiving a non-depolarizing paralytic during surgery has paralysis reversed by increasing acetylcholine at the NMJ.

What is neostigmine?

300

A patient with chronic pain develops pinpoint pupils, constipation, and respiratory depression after dose escalation of medication.

What is a mu-opioid receptor agonist?

400

A cannabinoid receptor produces analgesia without psychoactive effects and is located mainly in the periphery.

What is the CB2 receptor?

400

A patient treated for IBS-C receives a partial agonist that increases GI secretion and peristalsis via serotonin receptors.

What is tegaserod?

400

A patient with schizophrenia develops fewer extrapyramidal symptoms on a drug that partially stimulates dopamine receptors while blocking serotonin receptors.

What is aripiprazole?

400

A surgical patient develops hypercarbia, muscle rigidity, and rising temperature after inhaled anesthesia.

What is malignant hyperthermia?

400

A patient with schizophrenia recently started on haloperidol presents with severe rigidity of both arms and legs, altered mental status, diaphoresis, and a very high temperature.

What is neuroleptic malignant syndrome?

500

A patient treated for opioid use disorder has QT prolongation and NMDA receptor blockade.

What is methadone?

500

A patient with tyramine toxicity presents with severe hypertension and headache and is treated acutely with benzodiazepines or this calcium channel blocker.

What is diltiazem?

500

A patient with tremor, rigidity, and bradykinesia has degeneration of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra affecting this pathway.

What is the nigrostriatal pathway?

500

A patient treated for muscle spasticity develops hypotension and bradycardia due to reduced sympathetic tone from alpha-2 receptor activation.

What is tizanidine?

500

A patient treated for Parkinson disease is given an MAO-B inhibitor and later develops agitation, myoclonus, hyperreflexia, and fever after starting an SSRI.

What is serotonin syndrome?

M
e
n
u