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NUR 210 Exam 2 | Principles of Pharmacology | (2026) Study Guide PDF | Galen Nursing

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INSTANT PDF DOWNLOAD — This NUR 210 Exam 2 Study Guide is created for students taking Principles of Pharmacology at Galen College of Nursing. It focuses specifically on Exam 2 content, helping students strengthen their understanding of pharmacologic mechanisms, medication safety concepts, and nursing responsibilities related to drug therapy. The material is organized to support efficient review and reinforce key concepts commonly tested in mid-course pharmacology exams. ️ Digital PDF format ️ Instant access after purchase ️ No physical item shipped NUR 210 exam 2, NUR210 exam 2 study guide, principles of pharmacology exam, nursing pharmacology exam 2, Galen nursing NUR 210, pharmacology nursing PDF, nursing pharmacology study guide, NUR 210 PDF, nursing school pharmacology, Galen College nursing, pharmacology exam prep, nursing medication principles, pharmacology notes nursing, nursing exam review, nursing pharmacology fundamentals, NUR 210 exam prep, Galen pharmacology study guide, nursing school study guide

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Uploaded on
January 13, 2026
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
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NUR 210
EXAM 2 STUDY GUIDE
Principles Of Pharmacology

Galen College of Nursing

, Exam 2 Pharm Study guide


Chapter 15
Adrenergic agonists
Sympathetic responses
Stimulation of sympathetic nervous system or use of adrenergic drugs can cause
dilation of pupils and bronchioles; increased heart rate; constriction of blood vessels; relaxation
of muscles in GI tract, bladder, and uterus.
Effects of adrenergic agonists at receptors
Alpha 1 receptor
Increases cardiac contractility, vasoconstriction
Dilates pupils, decreases salivary gland secretion
Increases bladder and prostate contraction
Alpha 2 receptor
Inhibits norepinephrine release
Promotes vasodilation and decreased bp
Decreases GI motility and tone
Beta 1 receptors
Increases cardiac contractility, heart rate
Increases renin secretion and increases bp
Beta 2 receptors
Decreases GI tone and motility
Bronchodilation
Increases blood flow t=in skeletal muscles
Relaxes smooth muscle of uterus
Activates liver glycogenolysis
Increases blood glucose
Dopaminergic
Located in the renal, mesenteric, coronary, and cerebral arteries
Vasodilation-increases flow
Neurotransmitter inactivation
Inactivation by
Reuptake of transmitter back into neuron
Enzymatic transformation or degradation
MAO inside neuron
COMT outside neuron
Diffusion away form the receptor
Drugs halt termination of neurotransmitter by inhibiting
Norepinephrine reuptake
Norepinephrine degradation
After the transmitter has performed its function, the action must be stopped to prevent
prolonging the effect

, Two enzymes that inactivate the metabolism of norepinephrine are monoamine oxidase
(MAO) and Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT).
Classification of adrenergic agonists
Direct-acting (epinephrine; norepinephrine)
Directly stimulates adrenergic receptor
Indirectly acting (amphetamine)
Stimulates release of norepinephrine from terminal nerve endings
Mixed acting (ephedrine)
Stimulates adrenergic receptor sties and stimulates release of norepinephrine
form terminal nerve endings
Also called sympathomimetics
Catecholamines
Catecholamines
Produce sympathetic response
Endogenous
Epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine
Synthetic
Isoproterenol, dobutamine
Noncatecholamines
Stimulate adrenergic receptors
Most have longer duration of action than endogenous and synthetic
Phenylephrine, metaproterenol, albuterol
Catecholamines: chemical structures of a substance that can produce a
sympathomimetic response
Noncatecholamines: stimulate adrenergic receptors
Many adrenergic agonists stimulate more than one adrenergic receptor site
ex. Epinephrine acts on alpha 1, beta 1, and beta 2
Epinephrine
Nonselective
Action
Alpha 1 increases the blood pressure
Beta 1 increases heart rate
Beta 2 promotes bronchodilation
Contraindications
Cardiac dysrhythmias, hypertension
Hyperthyroidism, DM
Pregnancy
Epinephrine is a nonselective, as it excites three different adrenergic receptors
approximately equally.
Action
Inotropic: strengthens myocardial contraction, increasing cardiac output
Vasoconstrictor: increases heart rate and systolic BP
Bronchodilator
Uses

, Anaphylaxis, anaphylactic shock
Bronchospasms, status asthmaticus
Cardiogenic shock, cardiac arrest
Side effects/adverse reactions
Cardiac dysrhythmias, palpitations, tachycardia, hypertension, dizziness,
headache, sweating, insomnia, restlessness, tremors, hyperglycemia
Drug interactions
Beta blockers
Decreases epinephrine action
Digoxin
Causes cardiac dysrhythmias
TCAs and MAOIs intensify and prolong effects
Nursing interventions
Monitor BP, heart rate, urine output
Report tachycardia, palpitations, tremors, dizziness, hypertension
Monitor IV site for infiltration
Antidote: phentolamine mesylate (regitine)
Avoid cold medications, and diet pills if hypertensive, diabetic, CAD, or
dysrhythmic
Avoid adrenergic when breastfeeding
Avoid continuous use of adrenergic nasal sprays
Pt should be placed on cardiac monitor for early detection of dysrhythmias.
Monitor urine output for early detection of decreased renal perfusion
Albuterol
Selective
Acts on beta 2 adrenergic receptors
Promotes bronchodilation
Uses
Treats bronchospasm, asthma, bronchitis, COPD
Caution
Severe cardiac disease
Hypertension, hyperthyroidism
DM, pregnancy
Renal dysfunction
Side effects/adverse reactions
Tremors, nervousness, restlessness, dizziness, tachycardia, palpitations, cardiac
dysrhythmias
Drug interactions
May increase effect with other sympathomimetics, MAO inhibitors, and TCAs
Antagonize effect with beta blockers
Nursing process: adrenergic agonist
Assessment
Determine the patients health history
Assess the patients drug history

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