RELIAS RN PHARMACOLOGY TEST A ACTUAL
EXAM LATEST EXAM
Pharmacology Relias Test A Exam Preparation — Real Exam Questions and Correct Answers
Update | 100 Verified Questions | A+ Graded
Total Questions Format Cognitive Mix Passing Standard
Multiple Choice (A-D), single best 25% Recall / 55% Application /
100 A+ Verified (≥85%)
answer 20% Analysis
Exam Overview: This comprehensive 100-question assessment mirrors the Relias RN Pharmacology Test A
competency examination, aligned with 2026-2027 evidence-based medication administration standards. Questions
span eight domains: pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, medication administration and safety, cardiovascular,
respiratory/GI, neurological/psychiatric, antimicrobial/endocrine, IV therapy/TPN, and integrated clinical case
scenarios. Approximately 75% of questions are scenario-based, 20% direct recall, and 5% dosage calculation. Each
question provides the verified correct answer marked [CORRECT] with a comprehensive rationale citing
pharmacologic principles, nursing interventions, medication safety standards (ISMP, Joint Commission), and Relias
competency frameworks. Use this exam for self-assessment, remediation, and competency validation. Practice by
covering the answers and rationales, attempting each question, then self-checking.
RELIAS RN PHARMACOLOGY TEST A — 100 Questions
Aligned with ISMP, The Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goals, ANA Pharmacology Standards, and 2026-2027
Relias RN competency framework.
SECTION: Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics (Q1-Q15)
15 questions covering pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics per the Relias RN Pharmacology Test A blueprint.
Q1: A nurse is teaching a patient about why their oral medication takes longer to act than the same drug given
IV. Which pharmacokinetic phase primarily accounts for this delay in the oral route?
A. Distribution across the blood-brain barrier
B. Absorption across gastrointestinal mucosa into systemic circulation [CORRECT]
C. Metabolism by hepatic CYP450 enzymes
D. Excretion through renal tubular secretion
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Absorption is the movement of drug from the administration site into systemic circulation. IV administration
bypasses absorption entirely (100% bioavailability, immediate onset), while oral drugs must cross GI mucosa and survive
first-pass metabolism before reaching systemic circulation, delaying onset. Distribution, metabolism, and excretion occur
after the drug is already in the bloodstream.
Aligned with ISMP, Joint Commission, and 2026-2027 Relias RN Pharmacology competency standards Confidential — Professional Certification Use
,Relias RN Pharmacology Test A — 2026/2027 Update | A+ Verified Page 2
Q2: A patient receiving IV vancomycin over 30 minutes suddenly develops flushing, rash, and itching of the
face, neck, and upper torso. The nurse recognizes this reaction is primarily caused by:
A. IgE-mediated anaphylaxis requiring epinephrine
B. Histamine release from rapid infusion of vancomycin (Red Man Syndrome) [CORRECT]
C. Direct nephrotoxicity from high serum levels
D. A true allergic reaction requiring permanent discontinuation
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Red Man Syndrome is a rate-related infusion reaction caused by vancomycin-induced histamine release,
presenting with flushing, erythema, and pruritus of the upper body. The intervention is to slow the infusion rate (over 60+
minutes) and premedicate with an antihistamine; it is not IgE-mediated anaphylaxis and does not require permanent drug
discontinuation.
Q3: A patient asks the nurse about drinking grapefruit juice while taking a prescribed statin. The nurse's best
response is based on the knowledge that grapefruit juice:
A. Increases gastric pH and reduces statin absorption
B. Inhibits CYP3A4 in the intestinal wall, increasing serum statin levels and risk of myopathy [CORRECT]
C. Speeds up hepatic metabolism and reduces statin efficacy
D. Binds to statins in the gut and prevents absorption
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Grapefruit juice irreversibly inhibits CYP3A4 enzymes in the small intestinal wall, increasing bioavailability and
serum levels of CYP3A4 substrates such as simvastatin, atorvastatin, and certain calcium channel blockers. This raises the
risk of statin-related myopathy and rhabdomyolysis. The mechanism is enzymatic inhibition, not pH change or physical
binding.
Q4: A patient who takes sildenafil (Viagra) for erectile dysfunction is prescribed nitroglycerin for newly
diagnosed angina. What is the most critical patient teaching point?
A. Take nitroglycerin at least 4 hours after sildenafil
B. Do not take sildenafil within 24 hours of nitroglycerin due to risk of life-threatening hypotension [CORRECT]
C. Switch to a longer-acting nitrate to avoid interaction
D. Increase fluid intake to counteract hypotension if both are taken
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Both sildenafil and nitrates cause vasodilation through cyclic GMP pathways; combined use produces profound,
potentially fatal hypotension. Sildenafil must NOT be taken within 24 hours of any nitrate (the package insert specifies at least
24 hours). There is no safe timing adjustment that permits combined use; the only safe action is avoidance.
Q5: A patient on warfarin therapy tells the nurse they have started eating large amounts of spinach and kale
salads. The nurse anticipates that this dietary change will:
A. Increase the INR and risk of bleeding
B. Decrease the INR and increase the risk of thrombosis [CORRECT]
C. Have no effect on warfarin therapy
D. Cause hepatotoxicity from vitamin K overload
Correct Answer: B
Aligned with ISMP, Joint Commission, and 2026-2027 Relias RN Pharmacology competency standards Confidential — Professional Certification Use
, Relias RN Pharmacology Test A — 2026/2027 Update | A+ Verified Page 3
Rationale: Spinach and kale are rich in vitamin K, which directly antagonizes warfarin's anticoagulant effect by supporting
hepatic synthesis of vitamin K-dependent clotting factors (II, VII, IX, X). Increased vitamin K intake lowers the INR and
increases thrombotic risk. Patients should maintain a consistent dietary vitamin K intake rather than abruptly increasing leafy
greens.
Q6: Which pharmacokinetic process is primarily responsible for the conversion of a lipid-soluble drug into a
more water-soluble form for renal elimination?
A. Absorption
B. Distribution
C. Metabolism (biotransformation) [CORRECT]
D. Excretion
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Metabolism (biotransformation), primarily occurring in the liver via the CYP450 enzyme system, converts
lipid-soluble drugs into more water-soluble metabolites that can be renally excreted. Excretion is the physical removal of the
drug/metabolites from the body; absorption and distribution occur before metabolism.
Q7: A drug with a narrow therapeutic index requires which of the following nursing interventions?
A. Administering the maximum dose to ensure efficacy
B. Monitoring serum drug levels and watching for signs of toxicity [CORRECT]
C. Discontinuing the drug at the first sign of any side effect
D. Doubling the dose if a dose is missed
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: A narrow therapeutic index (e.g., digoxin, warfarin, vancomycin, lithium) means the effective dose and toxic dose
are close together. Safe nursing care requires serum drug level monitoring, vigilant assessment for toxicity signs, and dose
individualization. Maximum dosing, abrupt discontinuation, and dose doubling are unsafe practices.
Q8: A nurse is caring for a patient with severe renal impairment. When administering medications, the nurse
understands that renal excretion impairment will most directly:
A. Increase drug metabolism by the liver
B. Prolong drug half-life and increase risk of drug accumulation and toxicity [CORRECT]
C. Decrease drug absorption from the GI tract
D. Increase protein binding of the drug
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Renal excretion is the primary elimination route for many drugs and their metabolites. Renal impairment prolongs
elimination half-life, leading to drug accumulation and toxicity unless doses are adjusted. The kidney does not compensate by
increasing hepatic metabolism, GI absorption, or protein binding.
Q9: First-pass metabolism affects which route of medication administration most significantly?
A. Sublingual
B. Intravenous
C. Oral [CORRECT]
D. Subcutaneous
Correct Answer: C
Aligned with ISMP, Joint Commission, and 2026-2027 Relias RN Pharmacology competency standards Confidential — Professional Certification Use