What is Pharmacology?
It is the study of drugs―their uses, actions, and adverse effects.
What is an Agonist?
A drug that binds to a receptor site and stimulates a response or action.
What is Pharmacokinetics?
Pharmacokinetics is concerned with the movement of drugs into, throughout, and out of the body.
What does route of administration mean?
route of administration refers to how a medication enters the body
What do Bronchodilators treat?
Dilate the airways of the lungs
Pharmaceutical drugs (also referred to as a "medications" or "drugs") treat what?
The symptoms of diseases, cure diseases, and prevent diseases.
What is an Antagonist?
A drug that binds to a receptor site and blocks the response.
What is Absorption?
How the drug enters the bloodstream.
What are the three routes of medication administration?
What do anticoagulants treat?
Prevent blood clots
What are the three names of drugs?
Double Jeopardy:
Give one example of a sound-alike brand name.
Chemical Name
Generic Name
Brand/Trade Name
What is Synergistic?
Drugs that enhance the effects of other drugs, thereby producing a combined greater effect.
What is Distribution?
How the drug travels to its target site.
A systemic Drug affects the whole body?
True
What do anticonvulsants treat?
Prevent seizures
What is a Drug Classification?
Drug classification is a term used to describe medications grouped together based on their chemical structure and the conditions they treat.
What is an Additive?
Adding each drug's effect to the other.
What is Metabolism?
Process by which drugs are chemically altered to make them sufficiently water-soluble for excretion.
What are the "Seven Rights" of Medication Administration?
The “seven rights” of medication administration:
What does a statin treat?
Treat high cholesterol
What are the different uses for drugs?
What is local action?
Double Jeopardy
What is Systemic action?
The drug primarily acts on the area to which it was administered.
The drug is carried throughout the body via the bloodstream.
What is Excretion?
How the drugs leave the body in either urine or feces.
Double Jeopardy
What are the all the routes of medication administration?
What do NSAIDs treat?
Reduce pain and inflammation