Question | Answer |
Absorption | occurs when the active ingredient of the drug enters the body fluids. |
Adverse Reactions | a harmful, unintended reaction to a drug administered at a normal dose. (allergic reaction, idiosyncratic) |
Antagonist | A drug that will block the action of another drug |
Distribution | the transport of a drug by the blood stream to its site of action |
Dose | a single administration of a drug, given at one time. |
Dosage | amount of a medication prescribed for the client by the physician in a given amount of time or at a given frequency. |
Excretion | process by which drugs are eliminated from the body, primarily through the kidneys |
Idiosyncratic Response | an individual’s unique hypersensitivity to a particular drug. An unexpected response to a medication. |
Incompatibility | when some drugs do not combine chemically or physically (or both) with other drugs. Signs include: changes in color, haziness, precipitate |
Lethal Dose | amount of a drug that will cause death. |
Maximal Dose | the largest amount of a drug that can be given safely. |
Medication (Drug) Interactions | When one medication modifies/alters the action of another medication; may produce a totally different effect than the expected effect of either drug; may be beneficial or harmful |
Metabolism (Biotransformation) | process by which a drug is broken down by the liver to inactive compounds (metabolites)through a series of chemical reactions. |
Minimal Dose | the smallest amount of a drug that produces a therapeutic effect. |
Pharmacology | study of drugs and their action on the living body. |
Pharmaceutical phase | from manufacture of the drug until administration and absorption by the body. |
Pharmicokinetic phase | involves the movement of the drug’s active ingredients from the body fluids into the entire system and to the site of intended action. (what the body does to the drug molecules |
Synergism | When one drug increases the action or the effect of another drug; also called potentiation. Example: warfarin + Depakote = much greater anticoagulant effect. |
Therapeutic Effects | beneficial, expected or predictable physiological response that a medication causes |
Toxic Dose | the amount of drug that produces signs and symptoms of poisoning. |
Toxic Effects | may develop after prolonged intake of a medication or when a medication accumulates in the blood because of impaired metabolism or excretion; also called cumulative effect. |
Drug interactions where one drug increases the action of another drug is called? | Synergism |
Movement of drug molecules from site of entry into the body is called? | Absorption |
Your patient took a prescription medicine to help her to sleep; however, she felt restless all night and did not sleep at all. The nurse recognizes that this patient has experienced a(an)? | Idiosyncratic reaction |
You are checking the IVPB for your patient and notice haziness and precipitate. Which drug interaction would you suspect? | Incompatibility |
Drugs may be known by three different names? | Chemical Name, Generic Name, Trade Name |
Generic Name | (nonproprietary) assigned by the manufacturer that first develops the drug before it becomes official. |
Characteristics of Generic name | Used in most official drug compendium listings (PDR), Name is not capitalized, More common to see generic name in the hospital setting. |
Acetaminophen is the _______ of Tylenol? | Generic Name |
Trade Name | Brand name (proprietary) is the drug’s registered trademark, given by the manufacturer |
Characteristics of a Trade name | First letter is capitalized; short and easy to pronounce.Brand name is more commonly used in the community. Name is usually followed by the trademark symbol: © or ™. |
Tylenol is the _______ of acetaminophen | Trade Name |
The nonproprietary name, most commonly used in hospital setting? | Generic name |
factors that affect how patients respond to medications. | Age, Weight, Physical health, Psychological status, Amount of food in the stomach, Dosage form, Gender, Environmental temperatures. |
Drugs are eliminated through which organs? | kidneys, liver, bowel, lungs, and Skin (exocrine glands) |
Kidneys | main organ of excretion. |
main organ that metabolizes drugs | Liver |
Enteral Route of Administration | administered along any portion of the G.I. tract |
Absorbed more slowly than any other route and Available in solid forms and liquid preparations. | Enteral Route of Administration |
Routes of Enteral drug administration | PO, Tubal, Suppository, Enema |
Tablet Forms | Caplets, Scored Tablet, Enteric Coated Tablet, Capsules |
Caplets | a tablet that has an elongated shape like a capsule and is coated for ease of swallowing. |
Scored Tablet | indentation or marking that allows tablet to be broken in half or quarters. |
Enteric Coated Tablet | a tablet with a special coating to prevent absorption in stomach |
Why should Enteric-coated tablets should never be crushed? | crushing them destroys the special coating and defeats its purpose |
Which kind of tablet can be cut to give half of a dose? | Scored Tablet |
Capsules | powders or pellets enclosed in a gelatin-like, elongated form. Sustained-release and timed-release capsules cannot be divided or crushed. |
These hould always be administered whole to achieve the desired result. | Capsules |
Oral Liquid Forms of Medications | Liquids, Suspensions |
Liquids | Syrups, Elixirs |
Suspension | one or more drugs finely divided into a liquid such as water. |
It is always important to _______ oral liquid medications prior to pouring? | shake |
For doses of medications less than 5 ml cannot be measured accurately in a medication cup? | use a calibrated oral syringe |
Pour the liquid so that the base of the this is even with the appropriate line measure on the cup? | Meniscus |
This is the number of rights in
medication administration.
Often applied to a pack. | 6 |
This is the term for when
two drugs with
similar actions are taken for a
doubled effect. | Additive effect |
This is the name assigned by the
manufacturer that first
develops the drug before it
becomes official. | Generic name |
These Drugs need to be
double-locked with separate
"narcotic keys" that require
accountability or a
specialized computer entry code | Controlled substances |
This is the term for the time
required for a drug
to reach its maximum
therapeutic response. | Peak effect |
This name is usually followed by
the trademark symbol: © or ™. | Trade name/brand name |
This is both the beginning and the
end; it is the time when all
controlled substances will be
counted. | Shift change |
It is understood that prescribed
medications may be given
within this time frame. It has both
a before an after. | 30 minutes before or after |
This is the term for the expected
or predictable physiological
responses that a medication causes. | Therapeutic Effects |
Drugs can be systematically
classified into a reasonable
number of drug groups on the
basis of mechanism of action,
body system and this category | Clinical Indication (Therapeutic) |
This is the number of nurses
required to perform a controlled
substance count | 2 |
When a nurse is performing a
patient identification, this common
accessory must be checked | Identification bracelet |
This may develop after prolonged
intake of a medication or when
a medication accumulates in the
blood because of impaired
metabolism or excretion | Toxic effects |
This is the largest category of
drugs, designated to be potentially
harmful unless their use is
supervised by a licensed health
care professional. | Prescription drugs |
One of these members of the
healthcare team is needed when
wasting an unused portion of a
controlled medication. | Registered Nurse |
This is done before getting a
medication out of its container,
also, prior to placing it in
medication cup, and again just
prior to administration of the
medication | Check the label |
This is the term for drug
interactions in which the effect
of a combination of two or more
drugs with similar actions is
greater than the individual drugs
given alone | Synergistic Effect |
This Congressional act regulated the
manufacture, distribution and
dispensation of drugs that have the
potential for abuse | Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970 |
These drugs have a high abuse
potential with no acceptable
medical use. | Schedule I |
All orders on the medication
administration record must be
checked against this form to
ensure the order is correct | Doctors Order DA 4256 |
First system of measurement used by pharmacists and physicians | Apothecary |
This system is the least accurate of the systems of measure | household |
Oral liquid medications are rounded to the nearest | tenth |
U100 means this | 100 units per 1 ml |
Most economical and most commonly used method of medication administration | PO or Oral |
Tablets should be rounded to this | nearest half or whole |
This term is defined as medications that are administered by a route other than by mouth or gastrointestinal tract, but commonly refers to injectables | Parenteral Medications |
Insulin and Heparin doses are rounded to this position | hundredth |
This term reflects the process of adding the diluent to the medication | reconstitution |
Distribution vs. Absorption | carried by blood vs. brought into the body |
How many does it take to waste/ dispose | at least two |
pediactric dosage | mg to body weight (kg) |
If gave it | Chart it |
verbal and telephone orders | Only RN can accept, Not LPN |