Pharmacology
Course Content from McGraw HillThis course introduces pharmacology as the study of drugs. The course begins with an explanation of therapeutic and adverse effects, in addition to the basic operation of the nervous system. Several major body systems are covered including the cardiovascular, urinary, respiratory, gastrointestinal, and reproductive systems, with particular emphasis on the endocrine and immune systems. The drugs that are used to treat such conditions are studied with respect to their mechanism of action, therapeutic effects, and adverse effects. Topics include muscle relaxants, anesthetics, pain medication, and psychoactive medications. As students work through this course, their understanding of how drugs impact the body, as intended and otherwise, will improve.
This Course Includes:
- Proctored Exams
- 48 hours grading turn-around
- Live technical and student support
- Free transcription to your destination school
- 150+ partner college and universities with direct articulation
- Self Paced
- Medical
- Content by McGraw Hill
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After completing this course, students will be able to:
- Relate drug terminology to their appropriate definitions, and analyze aspects of drug actions, effects, interactions, and individual responses.
- Solve dosage calculation problems involving fractions, decimals, percents, ratios, proportions and using the metric, apothecary, and household measurement systems.
- Evaluate the contribution of nutrients towards maintaining normal body function, and explain nutrition deficiency, drug and supplement interaction, and effects of supplement overdose.
- Describe brain structure and functioning; examine the functioning of the sympathetic, parasympathetic, and autonomic nervous systems; and how drugs increase or decrease their activities.
- Compare and contrast general and local anesthetics with reference to their routes of administration, mechanisms of action, effects, and adverse effects.
- Evaluate the contribution of muscle relaxants, opioid, and non-opioid analgesics towards relieving pain and reducing inflammation, and assess their effects and adverse effects.
- Analyze the various types of mental disorders and evaluate the effects of antipsychotic, antianxiety, antidepressant, antimanic, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, hypnotic and psychotomimetic drugs; examine the potential for abuse.
- Describe the normal cardiac cycle, common cardiac conditions, and drugs used to treat cardiac arrhythmias, angina pectoris, congestive heart failure and high blood pressure.
- Explain the mechanisms of action of coagulants and anticoagulants, causes and treatment of anemia, the mechanisms and actions of the various hypolipidemic drugs, and their adverse effects.
- Analyze the structure and function of the kidneys, their effect on other body systems, and the actions and side effects of diuretics.
- Relate the nature of allergic reactions to the use of antiallergic and antihistamine drugs, and explain the actions of drugs used to treat respiratory diseases.
- Examine the actions, adverse effects, and interactions of drugs used to treat hyperacidity, gastroesophageal reflux disease, vomiting, ulcers, simple diarrhea, and laxatives and cathartics.
- List and explain clinical indications and contraindications, administration, and drug interactions of growth hormones, thyroid hormones, and adrenal steroids.
- Relate the action of insulin and glucagon to the treatment of diabetes, and explain the aspects of drug administration including adverse effects, contraindications, and drug interactions.
- Explain how antiseptics and disinfectants work to prevent infection; the actions of antibacterial, antifungal, antiprotozoal, antiparasitic, and antiviral drugs in fighting infections; and their adverse effects, contraindications, and interactions.
- Describe the characteristics and types of cancer, as well as the actions and effects of drugs used to treat them.
Topic |
Topic |
Subtopics |
Objectives |
1 |
Introduction to Pharmacology |
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2 |
Dosage Calculations |
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3 |
The Nervous System |
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4 |
Psychological Disorders and Drugs |
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5 |
Common Pain Relief Agents |
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6 |
Cardiac Function, Disorders, and Blood Pressure |
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7 |
Blood Clotting, Anemia, and Lipids |
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8 |
Respiratory System |
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9 |
Gastrointestinal Disorders and Intestinal Motility |
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10 |
Endocrine System and Steroids |
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11 |
Thyroid and Parathyroid Glands |
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12 |
Pancreatic Hormones |
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13 |
Hormones and Reproduction |
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14 |
Viral, Bacterial, and Fungal Pharmacology |
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15 |
Parasitic Infection and Wound Pharmacology |
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16 |
Cancer and Immune Pharmacology |
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17 |
Nutrition, Fluids, and Diuretics |
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18 |
Review |
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There are no prerequisites to take Pharmacology.
The required eTextbook for this course is included with your course purchase at no additional cost. More information on StraighterLine eTextbooks
Prefer the hard copy? Simply purchase from your favorite textbook retailer; you will still get the eTextbook for free.
Pharmacology is incredibly readable, with short chapters that link theory to practice; content that is focused on the need-to-know information to not overload the reader; excellent tables and features such as Patient Administration and Monitoring Boxes; and the most up-to-date drug information.
StraighterLine provides a percentage score and letter grade for each course. A passing percentage is 70% or higher.
If you have chosen a Partner College to award credit for this course, your final grade will be based upon that college's grading scale. Only passing scores will be considered by Partner Colleges for an award of credit. There are a total of 1000 points in the course:
Topic | Assessment | Points Available |
4 |
Graded Exam #1 |
125 |
8 |
Graded Exam #2 |
125 |
8 |
Midterm Exam |
200 |
13 |
Graded Exam #3 |
125 |
17 |
Graded Exam #4 |
125 |
18 |
Final Graded Exam |
300 |
Total |
1000 |
Final Proctored Exam
Learn more about Proctored Exams