Practice Nurse Prescribers, 6th Edition
Questions With Correct Answers (Verified
Answers) Plus Rationales 2026 Q&A | Instant
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1. Which of the following best describes the primary goal of
pharmacotherapeutics?
a. To understand drug manufacturing processes
b. To prevent adverse drug reactions
c. To achieve desired therapeutic outcomes safely and effectively
d. To minimize the cost of medications
Rationale: Pharmacotherapeutics focuses on selecting and using
drugs to achieve optimal patient outcomes while minimizing harm.
2. The term “pharmacokinetics” refers to:
a. How drugs exert their effects on the body
b. How the body absorbs, distributes, metabolizes, and excretes
drugs
c. Patient adherence to medication regimens
d. Drug-drug interactions
Rationale: Pharmacokinetics describes the movement of drugs
through the body, often summarized as ADME (Absorption,
Distribution, Metabolism, Excretion).
3. A patient with impaired liver function may experience:
a. Faster drug absorption
b. Increased renal excretion
, c. Decreased drug metabolism leading to higher plasma levels
d. Increased drug distribution
Rationale: Liver impairment reduces metabolism of drugs,
potentially causing accumulation and toxicity.
4. Which phase of clinical trials primarily assesses drug efficacy?
a. Phase I
b. Phase II
c. Phase III
d. Phase IV
Rationale: Phase II trials evaluate the efficacy and safety of a drug
in patients with the target condition.
5. A high first-pass effect refers to:
a. Increased oral bioavailability
b. Decreased systemic drug concentration after oral
administration
c. Rapid hepatic metabolism reducing active drug levels
d. Slower absorption in the intestine
Rationale: Drugs with high first-pass metabolism are extensively
metabolized in the liver before reaching systemic circulation.
6. Which receptor type is most commonly involved in
neurotransmission?
a. Ion channels
b. G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs)
c. Nuclear receptors
d. Enzyme-linked receptors
Rationale: GPCRs mediate many neurotransmitter effects by
triggering intracellular signaling cascades.
,7. The therapeutic index of a drug is:
a. The duration of action
b. The drug’s half-life
c. The ratio of toxic dose to therapeutic dose
d. The absorption rate
Rationale: A high therapeutic index indicates a wide margin of
safety between effective and toxic doses.
8. Which route of administration bypasses first-pass metabolism?
a. Oral
b. Sublingual
c. Rectal
d. Enteric-coated oral
Rationale: Sublingual administration allows absorption directly
into systemic circulation, avoiding liver metabolism.
9. A patient taking a drug with a narrow therapeutic index should
have:
a. Less frequent monitoring
b. Frequent therapeutic drug monitoring
c. Dose doubled to ensure efficacy
d. No concern about interactions
Rationale: Narrow therapeutic index drugs require careful
monitoring to prevent toxicity or subtherapeutic effects.
10. Which of the following drugs is primarily metabolized via
cytochrome P450 enzymes?
a. Insulin
b. Warfarin
c. Amoxicillin
, d. Digoxin
Rationale: Warfarin is metabolized by CYP450 enzymes, and
interactions with other drugs can alter its activity.
11. A loading dose is used to:
a. Reduce adverse effects
b. Rapidly achieve therapeutic plasma levels
c. Minimize first-pass metabolism
d. Extend the half-life of a drug
Rationale: Loading doses are higher initial doses that quickly reach
desired drug concentrations.
12. The half-life of a drug determines:
a. Its potency
b. The time required for plasma concentration to decrease by
50%
c. Therapeutic index
d. Onset of action
Rationale: Half-life guides dosing intervals to maintain therapeutic
levels.
13. Which of the following best describes a type I
hypersensitivity reaction?
a. IgE-mediated allergic reaction
b. Autoimmune reaction
c. T-cell mediated delayed response
d. Cytotoxic antibody reaction
Rationale: Type I reactions involve IgE antibodies, leading to
immediate allergic responses.