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NURS 5334 Quiz 1 Pediatric Prescribing Practice Test with Rationales

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Prepare confidently for advanced pediatric prescribing assessments with the NURS 5334 Quiz 1 Pediatric Prescribing Practice Test with Rationales. This comprehensive study resource is designed for nursing and advanced practice students seeking to strengthen their understanding of safe and effective medication prescribing in pediatric populations. The practice test includes carefully developed multiple-choice questions covering pediatric pharmacology principles, dosage calculations, developmental considerations, common childhood conditions, medication safety, adverse reactions, and evidence-based prescribing practices. Each question is accompanied by detailed expert rationales to reinforce learning, improve clinical judgment, and help students understand why each answer is correct or incorrect. Ideal for exam preparation, NCLEX-style review, coursework reinforcement, and pediatric nurse practitioner studies, this practice test supports mastery of pediatric prescribing concepts while building confidence for quizzes and clinical practice. Whether you are preparing for NURS 5334 assessments, reviewing pediatric pharmacotherapeutics, or enhancing your medication management skills, this resource provides a focused and practical approach to pediatric prescribing success.

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Institution
Advanced Pharmacology For Nurse Practitioners
Course
Advanced Pharmacology for Nurse Practitioners

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NURS 5334 (2262) - Quiz 1 + Pediatric Prescribing
Exercise

Updated 200-Question Practice Test (Answers +
Detailed Rationales After Each Question)

Section 1: Pharmacodynamics
Q1. A drug produces a maximal effect (Emax) that is lower than the endogenous ligand even
when all receptors are occupied. This drug is best classified as:

, A. A full agonist

B. A partial agonist

C. A competitive antagonist

D. An inverse agonist

Correct answer: B

Rationale: Partial agonists have intrinsic activity but cannot produce the same maximal
response as a full agonist, even at high concentrations (they have lower efficacy/Emax).

Key takeaway: Potency is about dose (EC50); efficacy is about max effect (Emax).

Sources: Pharmacodynamics.PartOne.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt;
Pharmacodynamics.PartTwoRecorded.Spring2020-English.txt;
Pharmacodynamics.PartThree.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt; Notes - Principles
of Pharmacology 2025.docx



Q2. In a graded dose-response curve, the EC50 represents:

A. The concentration producing 50% receptor occupancy in all cases

B. The maximal effect of the drug

C. The concentration producing 50% of the maximal effect

D. The dose that kills 50% of the population

Correct answer: C

Rationale: EC50 is a graded curve parameter describing potency: the concentration that
produces 50% of that drug’s Emax.

Key takeaway: Lower EC50 = higher potency (assuming same assay/conditions).

Sources: Pharmacodynamics.PartOne.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt;
Pharmacodynamics.PartTwoRecorded.Spring2020-English.txt;
Pharmacodynamics.PartThree.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt; Notes - Principles
of Pharmacology 2025.docx

,Q3. Two drugs produce the same Emax, but Drug A reaches 50% effect at a lower concentration
than Drug B. Drug A is:

A. More efficacious

B. A partial agonist

C. Less potent

D. More potent

Correct answer: D

Rationale: If Emax is the same but one drug reaches effect at a lower concentration, that drug is
more potent (left-shifted curve, lower EC50).

Key takeaway: Potency ≠ efficacy.

Sources: Pharmacodynamics.PartOne.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt;
Pharmacodynamics.PartTwoRecorded.Spring2020-English.txt;
Pharmacodynamics.PartThree.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt; Notes - Principles
of Pharmacology 2025.docx



Q4. A competitive antagonist added to an agonist typically causes which change on a
graded dose-response curve?

A. Right shift with no change in Emax

B. Left shift with higher Emax

C. Lower Emax with no shift

D. Right shift with lower Emax

Correct answer: A

Rationale: Competitive antagonists compete at the same binding site and can be overcome with
higher agonist concentrations, producing a right shift (increased EC50) but the same Emax.

Key takeaway: Competitive antagonism is surmountable.

Sources: Pharmacodynamics.PartOne.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt;
Pharmacodynamics.PartTwoRecorded.Spring2020-English.txt;

, Pharmacodynamics.PartThree.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt; Notes - Principles of
Pharmacology 2025.docx



Q5. An irreversible (noncompetitive) antagonist typically causes which change on a graded
dose-response curve?

A. Right shift with no Emax change

B. Decreased Emax

C. Increased Emax

D. No change in potency or efficacy

Correct answer: B

Rationale: Noncompetitive/irreversible antagonism reduces the number of functional receptors,
which typically lowers the maximal achievable effect (Emax).

Key takeaway: Noncompetitive antagonism is not fully surmountable.

Sources: Pharmacodynamics.PartOne.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt;
Pharmacodynamics.PartTwoRecorded.Spring2020-English.txt;
Pharmacodynamics.PartThree.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt; Notes - Principles
of Pharmacology 2025.docx



Q6. Which receptor class directly regulates ion flow across a membrane (fast synaptic signaling)?

A. G-protein coupled receptor

B. Nuclear (intracellular) receptor

C. Enzyme-linked receptor (tyrosine kinase)

D. Ligand-gated ion channel

Correct answer: D

Rationale: Ligand-gated ion channels open/close in response to ligand binding, producing rapid
effects compared with GPCRs or gene transcription pathways.

Key takeaway: Know the four major receptor families.

Sources: Pharmacodynamics.PartOne.Recorded.Spring2020-English.txt;
Pharmacodynamics.PartTwoRecorded.Spring2020-English.txt;

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Institution
Advanced Pharmacology for Nurse Practitioners
Course
Advanced Pharmacology for Nurse Practitioners

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