Homeostasis/
Thermodynamics

Pharmacokinetics

Pharmacodynamics

Transcription/ Translation
Neurotransmitters
100

What is the body's control center?

Hypothalamus

100

What does ADME stand for?

Absorption, Digestion, Metabolism, Elimination

100

What is the Food, Drug, & Cosmetic Act?

Required safety (toxicity) testing

100

Where does transcription occur?

Nucleus

100

Give an example of an inhibitory neurotransmitter? 

GABA

200

What is central shunting?

Peripheral vasoconstriction and central shunting go hand-in-hand. When your peripheral blood vessels constrict, blood is shunted away from your peripheral body parts and towards your core (blood is warm and your body wants to keep your most vital organs warm and functioning properly) which are located centrally in your body.

200

What organs/organ systems participate in metabolism?

Mostly accomplished by the liver (phase I & phase II). Also includes GI Tract, lungs, skin, and kidneys

200

List the drugs that don’t work via a receptor

Antacids, osmotic laxatives, chelating agents/resins

200

Where does translation occur?

Cytoplasm 

200

Give an example of an excitatory neurotransmitter?

Glutamate

300
Describe a negative feedback loop. Provide an example of one

works to restore homeostasis by correcting a deficit in the system and producing adaptive responses in the opposite capacity (ex: pancreas releases more insulin when blood sugar is high)

300

What does % PPB tell you?

The percentage of drug bound to a protein and is therefore unusable

300

What is Potentiation?

When one drug (w/ negligible or no effects alone)  enhances effects of another drug 

300

What enzyme is responsible for synthesizing an RNA strand from a DNA template? 

RNA Polymerase 

300

What neurotransmitters are involved in arousal/sleep?

Acetylcholine

Dopamine

GABA

Histamine

Norepinephrine

Serotonin

400

What are the 3 basic components of a feedback loop?

Sensors

CNS Control Center

Effector

400

Define ion trapping?

When a weak acid goes from an acidic environment to a basic environment, it becomes ionized and can no longer cross back into an acidic environment (and vice versa)

400

What is tachyphylaxis? 

Reduction in drug responsiveness by repeated doses over SHORT TERM

400

List the 4 bases involved in translation:

Adenine, Uracil, Guanine, Cytosine 

400

What neurotransmitters are involved in pain perception?

Glutamate

Serotonin

Oxytocin

Substance P

500

When would therapeutic hypothermia be beneficial?

Stroke/heart attack. Despite hypothermia and rewarming inducing injury, many benefits of hypothermia have been demonstrated when used to preserve brain, cardiac, hepatic, and intestinal function against ischemic injury.

500

What is a p-glycoprotein transporter? Give at least 3 examples of the organs involved. 

FXN: transports drugs out of the cell

Intestines - transport to intestinal lumen (reduces drug absorption into blood)

Kidney - pumps drugs into urine for elimination

Liver - transports drugs into bile for elimination

Placenta - transports drugs back into maternal blood

Brain - pumps drugs into blood limiting access to brain 

500

Drug tolerance can be....?

Pharmacodynamic

Metabolic

Tachyphylaxis

500

Where is protein synthesized?

Ribosome

500

Describe the role of neurotransmitters and receptors in a chemical synapse.

At a chemical synapse, one neuron releases neurotransmitter molecules into a small space (the synaptic cleft) that is adjacent to another neuron. These molecules then bind to neurotransmitter receptors on the postsynaptic cell.

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