Answers Verifed 100% Correct
What is the adverse effect of Depakote on the liver? - ANSWER can cause liver
damage, and the risk is more likely to occur during the first 6 months of taking the
medication. Signs might include nausea or vomiting, loss of appetite, abdominal pain,
dark-colored urine, facial swelling, and yellowing of the skin or white of eyes
What would you do for a patient on Depakote with +4 protein in the urine? - ANSWER
Rule out UTI, no adjustment for medication is needed
What happens when you take carbamazepine (tegertal) and erythromycin together? -
ANSWER It will decrease the effect of the antibiotic by inhibition
What happens when you take zyprexa and smoke? - ANSWER nicotine will increase
the excretion of the drug thereby inhibiting it's effect
ICP in Infants S/S - ANSWER Bulging fontanels, high-pitch cry, irritability, restlessness
*ICP*
*CHILDREN* signs and symptoms - ANSWER • Headache
• Vomiting (usually projectile)
• Seizures
• Diplopia (Dbl vision), blurred vision
Neuro cry - ANSWER high-pitched and very grating on the ears due to their
neurological sxs being overwhelmed
Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome - ANSWER Adverse reaction to antipsychotics with
severe "lead pipe" rigidty, FEVER, and mental status changes. FEVER:
Fever
Encephalopathy
Vitals unstable
Elevated enzymes
Rigidity of muscles
NMS treatment - ANSWER Dantrolene
D2 agonists (e.g., bromocriptine).
, lead poisoning - ANSWER A medical condition caused by toxic levels of the metal lead
in the blood
Lead poisoning treatment - ANSWER chelation therapy
Amygdala's role in emotion - ANSWER - Aggression center
- Role in storing implicit emotional memories
- Stimulation (+) anger/violence or fear/anxiety
- Damage (-) mellow; hyperorality; hypersexuality; dis-inhibited behavior
Amygdala role in aggression - ANSWER Small volume increase aggression.
Frontal Lobe Atrophy - ANSWER As neurons die in the frontal and temporal regions,
these lobes atrophy, or shrink. Gradually, this damage causes difficulties in thinking and
behaviors normally controlled by these parts of the brain. ... Scientists think that FTLD
(frontal temporal lobe dementia) is the most common cause of dementia in people
younger than age 60
Four dopaminergic pathways - ANSWER mesocortical
mesolimbic
nigrostriatal
tuberoinfundibular
mesocortical pathway - ANSWER a path through which dopaminergic projections
travel to reach the neocortex
mescolimbic pathway - ANSWER The mesolimbic pathway, sometimes referred to as
the reward pathway, is a dopaminergic pathway in the brain. The pathway connects the
ventral tegmental area in the midbrain, to the ventral striatum of the basal ganglia in the
forebrain. The ventral striatum includes the nucleus accumbens and the olfactory
tubercle.
Nigrostriatal pathway - ANSWER the dopaminergic tract from the substantia nigra to
the striatum
Tuberoinfundibular pathway - ANSWER from hypothalamus to anterior pituitary -> DA
released from these neurons inhibit prolactin secretion -> when DA receptors here are
blocked prolactin levels rise cause galactorrhea)
primary prevention - ANSWER Efforts to prevent an injury or illness from ever