Medical Pharmacology Chapter 3:
Pharmacodynamics Practice Questions
Choose the correct answer for each question.
Which one of the following drug receptor classes have been best decribed and characterized?
- enzymes
- structural proteins
- transport proteins
- regulatory proteins
Which one(s) of the following is an example of a structural protein?
- Na+/K+-ATPase
- tubulin
- dihydrofolate reductase
- all of the above
Which one of the statements best decribes an "orphan" receptor?
- A receptor for which the function is unknown.
- A receptor for which no naturally occuring (endogenous) agent has been identified.
- A receptor associated with a rare disease?
- A receptor which is associated with disease but which has not attracted significant research interest?
In a patient, a response to a low dose to a drug is likely followed by an indefinitely increasing response as the dose is increased.
- true
- false
A high enough concentration of an agonist drug (causes the biological effect) can prevent the effect of a competitive antagonist (blocking) drug.
- True
- False
After a non-competitive drug has bound to its receptor, subsequent administration of an agonist drug is unlikely to reverse the block.
- True
- False
This/these drug(s) is/are (an) example(s) of an effectively irreversible alpha-adrenergic receptor blocker.
- phentolamine
- phenoxybenzamine
- both
- neither
This is a defining characteristic of a partial agonist drug.
- This type of drug cannot fully occupy the available receptors.
- This type of drug has a reduced affinity for the receptor compared to full agonists.
- This type of drug produces a reduced response compared to a full agonist because of a limit on the ability to give enough partial agonist drug.
- This type of drug, even at doses that fully saturate the receptor, does not elicit a response as great as that seen with a full agonist.
Concerning drug antagonism, "physiological antagonism" involves which one(s) of the following:
- A case in which one drug acts as an antagonist of another.
- A case in which the antagonism involves endogenous regulatory pathways mediated by different receptors.
- both
- neither
A lipid-soluble drug crossing a membrane to act on an intracellular receptor is an example of a basic mechanism of transmembrane signaling.
- True
- False