ANS
PharmacOMG
Pharmygosh there's more
Cardiac
Acute Coronary
Valves
100

CNS generates impulses AWAY via this type of nerve, which initiates motor response

What is an efferent nerve?

100

Refers to the movement of drugs into, through, and out of the body; what a body does to a drug

What is pharmacokinetics?

100

The study of drugs

What is pharmacology?

100

Pacemaker of the heart

What is the SA node?

100

Chest pain resulting from a fixed and intact plaque lesion, often occurring with exertion and relieved with rest or nitroglycerin

What is stable angina?

100

Connect valve leaflets to papillary muscles

What are chordae tendineae?

200

This division controls rest & digest and is responsible for decreasing heart rate and contractility. 75-80% of its nerve fibers pass through Vagus nerve.

What is parasympathetic nervous system?

200

This permits entry of the drug from site of administration into the blood stream

What is absorption?

200

The LIVER is the main organ involved in drug ___________

What is metabolism?

200

This chamber is predominantly a filling chamber

What is an atrium?

200
Chest pain resulting from arterial spasm, commonly seen with cocaine abuse
What is variant angina?
200

Audible blood flow in the heart, typically through a valve

What is a murmur?

300

Pressure sensitive neurons that help maintain blood pressure at nearly constant levels

What is baroreceptor (reflex)?

300

This route of administration gets under your skin with IV, IM, or SC

What is parenteral?

300

Describes what drugs do to the body

What is pharmacodynamics?

300

Describes the portion of the aorta that gives rise to the coronary arteries

What are the sinuses of Valsalva?

300

Describes a condition where blood flow is completely cut off resulting in necrosis, or cell death

What is infarction?

300

Valve pathology demonstrating reduced opening of a valve; most common site is MV due to rheumatic fever

What is stenosis?

400

Nerves that release norepinephrine at their post ganglionic nerve ending are known as this and are found in the sympathetic nervous system

What is adrenergic?

400

Measure of strength/concentration of a drug required to produce a specific effect

What is potency?

400

Drugs that bind to a receptor to produce a drug action are called

What are agonists?

400

Volume of blood ejected from the heart each minute, calculated as SV x HR

What is cardiac output?

400

Subendocardial infarction; not always visible on ECG

What is NSTEMI

400

Leakage of a valve

What is regurgitation/insufficiency?

500
Flow from capillary beds into interstitial fluid

What is filtration?

500

Time required for the blood concentration of the drug to fall to half of its original level

What is half-life?

500

Undesired effects that are not just a nuisance - they may actually be harmful (ie persistent diarrhea)

What are adverse effects?

500

Percentage of blood ejected from the ventricle with each beat, calculated as (EDV-ESV)/EDV

What is ejection fraction?

500

Transmural infarction; visible as an elevation on ECG

What is STEMI?

500

Upon closure, this is the bowing back of valve leaflets behind valve annulus

What is prolapse?