Brand Names
Vital Signs
Pharmacist Recovery Network
Math!
Random Samples
100
Bentyl
What is dicyclomine
100
Pulse 75; O2 90%; Respirations 16; BP 100/70
What is O2 sat (95% or greater)
100
Only the pharmacist or pharmacy student themselves can call the hotline.
What is False, you can call and report a friend or coworker if you feel they have an issue.
100
You are in a code for a patient. The doctor orders norepinephrine 0.2 mcg/kg/min. Your patient weighs 85kg. You have 2 4mg vials of norepinephrine and a d5w 250ml bag. What rate do you tell the nurse to start the drip at?
What is 31.9 ml/hr
100
Which of the following antibiotics are known to have bactericidal activity due to its ability to inhibit cell wall synthesis? a. Piperacillin/tazobactam (Zosyn) b. Ciprofloxacin (Cipro) c. Minocycline (Dynacin, Minocin, Solodyn) d. Azithromycin (Zithromax)
What is a. Zosyn Piperacillin/tazobactam is the only antibiotic listed that can inhibit cell synthesis. Remember it is a beta-lactam antibiotic that is known to inhibit the transpeptidation (or cross linking) of the disaccharide units that make up the peptidoglycan cell wall. Ciprofloxacin is a fluoroquinolone that inhibits DNA replication via inhibition of DNA gyrase or topoisomerase II. Minocycline is a tetracycline antibiotic that inhibits protein synthesis and is also bacteriostatic. Azithromycin is a macrolide antibiotic that inhibits protein synthesis via inhibition of 50S ribosome.
200
Anti-vert
What is meclizine
200
Pulse 120; O2 sat 96%; Respirations 18; BP 100/75
What is Pulse (60-100)
200
The network works independently from the state board of pharmacy
What is false, the networks works closely with the board of pharmacy to aid recovering pharmacists
200
Treatment A causes 15% of patients to experience a MI. Treatment B causes 5% of patients to experience a MI. What is the Absolute Risk Reduction of Treatment B?
What is 0.1 or 10%
200
When starting an HIV infected patient on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) that contains efavirenz (Sustiva), which of the following would be most important to counsel the patient on? a. Efavirenz should not be taken with a high fat meal as it can increase its absorption in the GI tract and cause some CNS side effects b. Efavirenz is associated with the development of painful peripheral neuropathy in some patients c. Efavirenz is a strong inhibitor of enzymes needed by other medications, thereby increasing the risk for drug-drug interactions d. Efavirenz can cause a yellow of the skin in about 10% of patients but is not harmful
What is a Efavirenz (Sustiva) is recommended to not be taken with a high fat meals as it can increase the absorption of the efavirenz thereby putting the patient at increased risk for CNS side effects including vivid dreams, nightmares, and/or psychosis. In most cases these side effects are worse early on in the initiation of efavirenz and decrease in severity over the first 2 weeks. Peripheral neuropathies are associated with the "d-drugs" in the nucleoside reverse transcriptase class of medications not non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Answer option c is wrong because efavirenz has a net effect of inducing enzymes (i.e., CYP450) involved in drug metabolism, not inhibiting them. The last answer choice is more common with atazanavir and/or indinavir due to their inhibition of UGT mediated conjugation of bilirubin in the liver.
300
Cardura
What is doxazosin
300
Pulse 85; O2 sat 99%; Respirations 18; BP 60/45
What is BP (90-140/60-90)
300
If a pharmacist refers themselve to the network, they can work with the network without any intervention needed from the board.
What is true!
300
Drug A is associated with a 5% incidence of rash. Drug B is associated with a 2.5% incidence of rash. What is the Number Needed to Harm?
What is 40 (1/(0.05-0.025)
300
What can occur if a patient were to continuously use nasal spray topical decongestants for beyond 3-5 days? a. Bradycardia b. Nose bleeds (epistaxis) c. Increased sensitivity to smell d. Rebound congestion
What is d It is well known that too much use of nasal decongestants can cause or result in rebound congestion or a condition called, rhinitis medicamentosa. This is due to the over stimulation of the alpha receptors resulting in their down-regulation. When this occurs the nasal congestion worsens, sometimes more than baseline or before starting the decongestant.
400
Humalog
What is insulin lispro
400
Pulse 65; O2 sat 100%; Resp 28; BP 100/60
What is Resp (12-20)
400
Which of the following is not a sign of abuse? a. Weight loss b. Increased spending c. Disorganization d. Insomnia
What is b. increased spending
400
What is the difference between a prospective and retrospective study?
What is prosceptive studies have the study designs set out prior to data collection. Retrospectives studies examine data that has already been collected.
400
Which of following best reflect the mechanism of action of memantine (Namenda) used in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease? a. Inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase enzyme b. Agonist to the D2 receptor in the central nervous system c. Antagonizes the NMDA receptor d. Inhibitor of monoamine oxidase enzyme
What is c Agonists of the D2 receptor are options for the treatment of Parkinson's disease and include pramipexole (Mirapex) and ropinirole (Requip). Inhibitors of monoamine oxidase enzyme are normally used in the treatment of depression and Parkinson's disease. Memantine (Namenda) is the only antagonist to the NMDA receptor, which blocks glutamates over activation of this receptor that may contribute to neuronal cell death. Donepezil (Aricept), galantamine (Razadyne), and rivastigamine (Exelon) are inhibitors of acetylcholinesterase and are known to increase the concentrations of acetylcholine in the synaptic cleft.
500
Adipex
What is phentermine
500
What is a normal GCS?
What is 15
500
All phone calls to the network on confidential
What is true
500
Calculate Corrected Calcium ; Albumin 1.8; Calcium 6.6
What is Corrected Calcium 8.36
500
Which of the following is a long-acting beta-2 receptor agonist (bronchodilator) that can be given by nebulization and as well as a dry powder inhaler (DPI) for the treatment of COPD? a. Formoterol b. Albuterol c. Pulmicort d. Fluticasone
What is a The key words are "long-acting" and "bronchodilator". Albuterol is a short acting bronchodilator (beta-2 agonist) and is available in a metered dose inhaler, solution for nebulization, and syrup for oral ingestion). Budesonide and fluticasone are both inhaled steroids with budesonide being the only one that can be given as an inhaler and nebulizer route