Lippincott Illustrated Reviews: Pharmacology 8th
Edition by Karen Whalen| 9781496384133| All Chapters
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3. The nurse is teaching a patient who will be discharged home with a prescription for an enteric- coated
tablet. Which statement by the patient indicates understanding of the teaching?
a. I may crush the tablet and put it in applesauce to improve absorption.
b. I should consume acidic foods to enhance absorption of this medication.
c. I should expect a delay in onset of the drugs effects after taking the tablet.
d. I should take this medication with high-fat foods to improve its action. CORRECT ANSWER: C
Enteric-coated tablets resist disintegration in the acidic environment of the stomach and disintegrate when
they reach the small intestine. There is usually some delay in onset of actions after taking these
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medications. Enteric-coated tablets should not be crushed or chewed, which would alter the time and
location of absorption. Acidic foods will not enhance the absorption of the medication. The patient should
absorption rate.
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not to eat high-fat food before ingesting an enteric-coated tablet, because high-fat foods decrease the
DIF: COGNITIVE LEVEL: Applying (Application) REF: dm 3 TOP: NURSING PROCESS: Nursing
Intervention
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MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
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4. A patient who is newly diagnosed with type 1 diabetes mellitus asks why insulin must be given by
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subcutaneous injection instead of by mouth. The nurse will explain that this is because
a.
b.
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absorption is diminished by the first-pass effects in the liver.
absorption is faster when insulin is given subcutaneously.
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c. digestive enzymes in the gastrointestinal tract prevent absorption.
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d. the oral form is less predictable with more adverse effects. CORRECT ANSWER: C
Insulin, growth hormones, and other protein-based drugs are destroyed in the small intestine by digestive
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enzymes and must be given parenterally. Because insulin is destroyed by digestive enzymes, it would not
make it to the liver for metabolism with a first-pass effect. Subcutaneous tissue has fewer blood vessels,
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so absorption is slower in such tissue. Insulin is given subcutaneously because it is desirable to have it
absorb slowly.
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Nursing Intervention: Patient Teaching
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MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
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