Intro to Pharm
Putting Pharm into Action
Nursing Process
Pain
Hormonal Regulation
Diabetes Medications
Insulin
100

How drugs are delivered through the body.

What is distribution?

100

When considering the various routes of drug elimination, the nurse is aware that elimination occurs mainly by these two routes.

What are the bowel and renal tubules?

100

This phase of the nursing process requires the nurse to establish a comprehensive baseline of data concerning a particular patient.


What is Assessment?

100

Amount of pain a person can endure without impeding normal daily function.

What is pain tolerance?

100

Patient teaching for a patient taking antithyroid medication will include the need to avoid these foods.

What are iodine-rich foods? (eg. seafood, dairy, eggs, iodized salt, and some soy products)

100

The client is scheduled for a cardiac catheterization. This medication has a potential interaction with the contrast dye and should be discontinued the day of the test withheld 48 hours after the test. 


What is metformin?

100

This medication is a rapid-acting insulin.

What is lispro? (also, aspart or glulisine)

200

The treatment of a condition to prevent or slow progression.

What is maintenance therapy?

200

A client has been using a topical estradiol patch at home and now reports having a full body sunburn. The phase of pharmacokinetics that will be disrupted.

What is absorption?

200

The nurse prepares and administers prescribed medications during which phase of the nursing process?


What is Implementation?

200

Fentanyl, hydromorphone, meperidine, methadone, morphine, and oxycodone.

What are strong opioids?

200

A patient who is beginning therapy with levothyroxine. This is the time that it will take for the medication to start working. 

What is a few weeks?

200

If a dose of this medication is missed, the client should take the next scheduled dose with their meal.

What is repaglinide?

200

This is the duration of action for insulin glargine.

What is 24 hours?

300

The study of what happens to a drug once it enters the body.

What is pharmacokinetics?

300

A drug has a half-life of 5 hours, the amount of time it takes to be eliminated from the body.

What is 25 hours?

300

This phase of the nursing process requires validating subjective reports with objective findings before moving forward with any plan.

What is the Assessment phase?

300

A young man has been taken to the emergency department because of a suspected overdose of morphine tablets. The nurse prepares to administer this drug.

What is Naloxone?

300

The adverse effects of this medication include hepatotoxicity and agranulocytosis.


What is methimazole?

300

The class of medications with a black box warning about causing or exacerbating heart failure.

What are glitazones?

300

This is the timing of administering regular insulin.

What is 30 minutes before a meal?

400

The time required for one-half (50%) of the drug to be removed from the body and helps maintain therapeutic levels of a medication.

What is half-life?

400

Possible fetal risk in humans is reported; however, consideration of potential benefit versus risk may, in selected cases, warrant use of these drugs in pregnant women.

What are Category D drugs?

400

The nurse is working with the client with diabetes to establish goals for an A1C target & a schedule for meals since being placed on repaglinide. This is the phase of the nursing process the nurse is working in?


(Bonus) The client must eat within ___ minutes of taking a glinide.

What is planning?


(Bonus: 30 minutes. Skip if omitting a meal.)

400

Organ and smooth muscle pain.

What is visceral pain?

400

Octreotide is often used to manage this condition caused by excess growth hormone, leading to enlarged hands, feet, and facial features.

What is acromegaly?

400

This medication should be taken with the first bite of food.

What is acarbose?

400

While monitoring a client who is receiving insulin therapy, the nurse observes irritability, sweating, and confusion.


What are signs of hypoglycemia?

500

When the amount of the drug eliminated and the amount of the drug absorbed are equal.

What is the steady state?

500

This term describes the biochemical changes to make the drug useful.

What is metabolism?

500

When administering insulin, the nurse rotates injection sites, follows the rights of medication administration, and educates the patient — all part of this specific step.

What is the Implementation phase?

500

Moderate to severe pain is best treated with this medication.


What is Fentanyl?

500

This medication, synthetic ADH, plays a key role in regulating the body’s water balance.

What is vasopressin?

500

These two diabetic classes have the adverse reaction of pancreatitis.

What is Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (Ex.Liraglutide) Agonist and Dipeptidyl Peptidase-IV inhibitors (Ex. Sitagliptin)?

500

This insulin can be given IV to control high blood glucose levels.

What is regular insulin?

600

The time required to elicit a therapeutic response.

What is the onset of action?

600

This field of study explains why two patients taking the same drug at the same dose may have completely different therapeutic responses or risks of adverse effects due to inherited differences in drug‑metabolizing enzymes.

What is pharmacogenomics?

600

This continuous cognitive process underlies every step of the nursing process and requires questioning, analyzing, and synthesizing information.

What is clinical reasoning or critical thinking?

600

This class of analgesics works primarily by binding to mu‑receptors in the CNS to decrease the perception of pain and alter emotional response to pain.

What are opioids?

600

An overdose or toxic levels of this medication is rare, but if it occurs can cause Thyroid Storm.

What is Levothyroxine (Synthroid)?

600

This medication decreases hepatic glucose production and can leave a metallic taste in the patients mouth.

What is Metformin?

600

This insulin is meant for basal coverage for type 1 diabetes and can last up to 42 hours.

What is Degludec (Tresiba)?

700

Replacing or adding something the body does not produce enough of on its own.

What is supplemental therapy?

700

Forms include aerosols, ointments, creams, pastes, powders, solutions, foams, gels, transdermal patches, inhalers, rectal and vaginal suppositories.

What is topical route?

700

This is the phase of the nursing process the nurse is working in when they check back on a client after giving glucagon following an episode of extreme hypoglycemia.

What is evaluation?

700

This centrally acting analgesic is both a weak mu‑opioid agonist and an inhibitor of serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake.

What is tramadol?

700

When combined with progesterone, this hormone can help reduce the risk of endometrial cancer in individuals with an intact uterus.

What is Estradiol (Estrogen)?

700

This diabetic medication is contraindicated in patients that have a sulfa allergy. 

What is Sulfonylureas (example: glipizide).

700

Your provider has ordered regular insulin and NPH insulin for the same time. This insulin should be pulled up first.



What is regular insulin?

800

The pharmacokinetic event impacted by slowed gastric emptying.

What is absorption?

800

The healthcare provider prescribes somatropin 0.2mg/kg/week SQ. The part of this prescription that should be clarified with the provider.

What is SQ? (Use SUBQ or subcutaneous(ly)

800

“Street” drugs, alcohol use, and herbal products are considered part of this.

What is a client's medication profile?

800

The client should take less than 3000-4000 mg over 24 hours of this medication to prevent toxicity. 

What is acetaminophen?

800

Vasopressin can be used to treat this condition characterized by excessive urination and inability to concentrate urine due to lack of ADH.

What is Diabetes Insipidus?

800

The side effects of this class of medications include genital yeast infection, urinary tract infection, and increased urination.

What are Sodium Glucose Cotransporter Inhibitors? (Canagliflozin, Empagliflozin)


800

The two types of insulin can be given as sliding scale insulin.

What are lispro (rapid) and regular insulin?

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