Итоговое 2020 MCQ
Итоговое 2020 MCQ
Итоговое 2020 MCQ
a) Oral
b) Sublingual
c) Subcutaneous
d) Rectal
2) Transdermal drug delivery systems offer the following advantages except:
a) They produce high peak plasma concentration of the drug
b) They produce smooth and noniluctuating plasma concentration of the drug
c) They minimize interindivldual variations in the achieved plasma drug concentration
d) They avoid hepatic first-pass metabolism of the drug
3) In addition to slow intravenous infusion, which of the following routes of administration allows for titration of the
dose of a drug with the response:
a) Sublingual
b) Transdermal
c) Inhalational
d) Nasal insufflation
4) Compared to subcutaneous injection, the intramuscular injection of drugs:
a) Is more painful
b) Produces faster response
c) Is unsuitable for depot preparations
d) Carries greater risk of anaphylactic reaction
5) Select the route of administration which carries the highest risk of adversely affecting vital functions:
a) Transdermal
b) Intrathecal injection
c) Intravenous injection
d) Intramuscular injection
6) Alkalinization of urine hastens the excretion of:
a) Weakly basic drugs
b) Weakly acidic drugs
c) Strong electrolytes
d) Nonpolar drugs
7) Majority of drugs cross biological membranes primarily by:
a) Passive diffusion
b) Facilitated diffusion
c) Active transport
d) Pinocytosis
8) Diffusion of drugs across cell membrane:
a) Is dependent upon metabolic activity of the cell
b) Is competitively inhibited by chemically related drugs
c) Is affected by extent of ionization of drug molecules
d) Exhibits saturation kinetics
9) The most important factor which governs diffusion of drugs across capillaries other than those in the brain is:
a) Blood flow through the capillary
b) Lipid solubility of the drug
c) pKa value of the drug
d) pH of the medium
10) Active transport of a substance across biological membranes has the following characteristics except:
a) It is specific
b) It is pH dependent
c) It is saturable
d) It requires metabolic energy
11) Bioavailability of drug refers to:
a) Percentage of administered dose that reaches systemic circulation in the unchanged form
b) Ratio of oral to parenteral dose
c) Ratio of orally administered drug to that excreted in the faeces
d) Ratio of drug excreted unchanged in urine to that excreted as metabolites
12) The most important factor governing absorption of a drug from intact skin is:
a) Molecular weight of the drug
b) Site of application
c) Lipid solubility of the drug
d) Nature of the base used in the formulation
13) The following attribute of a drug tends to reduce its volume of distribution:
a) High lipid solubility
b) Low ionisation at physiological pH values
c) High plasma protein binding
d) High tissue binding
14) Marked redistribution is a feature of:
a) Highly lipid soluble drugs
b) Poorly lipid soluble drugs
c) Depot preparations
d) Highly plasma protein bound drugs
15) The blood-brain barrier, which restricts entry of many drugs into brain, is constituted by:
a) A P-glycoprotein efflux carriers in brain capillary cells
b) Tight junctions between endothelial cells of brain capillaries
c) Enzymes present in brain capillary walls
d) All of the above
16) Which of the following is not true of the blood-brain barrier:
a) A It is constituted by tight junctions between the endothelial cells of brain capillaries and the
glial tissue
b) It allows passage of lipid soluble drugs into the brain
c) It limits entry of highly ionized drugs into the brain
d) It regulates passage of substances from brain into blood
17) Weakly acidic drugs:
a) Are bound primarily to a: acid glycoprotein in plasma
b) Are excreted faster in alkaline urine
c) Are highly ionized in the gastric juice
d) Do not cross blood-brain barrier
18) High plasma protein binding:
a) A Increases volume of distribution of the drug
b) Facilitates glomerular filtration of the drug
c) Minimises drug interactions
d) Generally makes the drug long acting
19) The plasma protein bound fraction of a drug:
a) Contributes to the response at the given moment
b) Remains constant irrespective of the total drug concentration
c) Remains constant irrespective of the disease state
d) Is not available for metabolism unless actively extracted by the liver
20) Biotransformation of drugs is primarily directed to:
a) Activate the drug
b) Inactivate the drug
c) Convert lipid soluble drugs into nonlipid soluble metabolites
d) Convert nonlipid soluble drugs into lipid soluble metabolites
21) A prodrug is:
a) The prototype member of a class of drugs
b) The oldest member of a class of drugs
c) An inactive drug that is transformed in the body to an active metabolite
d) A drug that is stored in body tissues and is then gradually released in the circulation
22) The most commonly occurring conjugation reaction for drugs and their metabolites is:
a) Glucuronidation
b) Acetylation
c) Methylation
d) Glutathione conjugation
23) Microsomal enzyme induction can be a cause of:
a) Tolerance
b) Physical dependence
c) Psychological dependence
d) Idiosyncrasy
24) Which of the following types of drug metabolizing enzymes are inducible:
a) Microsomal enzymes
b) Nonmicrosomal enzymes
c) Both microsomal and nonmicrosomal enzymes
d) Mitochondiial enzymes
25) Induction of drug metabolizing enzymes involves:
a) A conformational change in the enzyme protein to favour binding of substrate molecules
b) Expression of enzyme molecules on the surface of hepatocytes
c) Enhanced transport of substrate molecules into hepatocytes
d) Increased synthesis of enzyme protein
26) Drugs which undergo high degree of first-pass metabolism in liver:
a) Have low oral bioavailability
b) Are excreted primarily in bile
c) Are contraindicated in liver disease
d) Exhibit zero order kinetics of elimination
27) Glomerular filtration of a drug is affected by its:
a) Lipid solubility
b) Plasma protein binding
c) Degree of ionization
d) Rate of tubular secretion
28) Which of the following is not a primary/fundamental, but a derived pharmacokinetic parameter:
a) Bioavailability
b) Volume of distribution
c) Clearance
d) Plasma half life
29) The loading dose of a drug is governed by its:
a) Renal clearance
b) Plasma half life
c) Volume of distribution
d) Elimination rate constant
30) What is true in relation to drug receptors:
a) All drugs act through specific receptors
b) All drug receptors are located on the surface of the target cells
c) Agonists induce a conformational change in the receptor
d) Partial agonists have low affinity for the receptor
31) Drugs acting through receptors exhibit the following features except.
a) Structural specificity
b) High potency
c) Competitive antagonism
d) Dependence of action on lipophilicity
32) Study of drug-receptor interaction has now shown that:
a) Maximal response occurs only when all receptors are occupied by the drug
b) Drugs exert an ‘all or none’ action on a receptor
c) Receptor and drugs acting on it have rigid complementary ‘lock and key’ structural features
d) Properties of «affinity» and «intrinsic activity» are independently variable
33) A partial agonist can antagonist the effects of a full agonist because it has:
a) High affinity but low intrinsic activity
b) Low affinity but high intrinsic activity
c) No affinity and low intrinsic activity
d) High affinity but no intrinsic activity
34) Agonists affect the receptor molecule in the following manner:
a) Alter its amino acid sequence
b) Denature the receptor protein
c) Alter its folding or alignment of subunits
d) Induce covalent bond formation
35) All of the following subserve as intracellular second messengers in receptor mediated signal transduction except:
a) Cyclic AMP
b) Inositol trisphosphate
c) Diacyl glycerols
d) G proteins
36) The receptor transduction mechanism with the fastest time-course of response effectuation is:
a) A Adenylyl cyclase-cyclic AMP pathway
b) Phospholipase C-IP3: DAG pathway
c) Intrinsic ion channel operation
d) Protein synthesis modulation
37) Down regulation of receptors can occur as a consequence of:
a) Continuous use of agonists
b) Continuous use of antagonists
c) Chronic use of CNS depressants
d) Denervation
38) When therapeutic effects decline both below and above a narrow range of doses, a drug is said to exhibit:
a) Ceiling effect
b) Desensitization
c) Therapeutic window phenomenon
d) Nonreceptor mediated action
39) 'Drug efficacy' refers to:
a) The range of diseases in which the drug is beneficial
b) The maximal intensity of response that can be produced by the drug
c) The dose of the drug needed to produce half maximal effect
d) The dose of the drug needed to produce therapeutic effect
40) An undesirable effect of a drug that occurs at therapeutic doses and can be predicted from its pharmacological
actions is called:
a) Side effect
b) Toxic effect
c) Allergic reaction
d) Idiosyncrasy
41) Which of the following is a type B (unpredictable) adverse drug reaction:
a) Side effect
b) Toxic effect
c) Idiosyncrasy
d) Physical dependence
42) A 'toxic effect' differs from a 'side effect' in that:
a) A It is not a pharmacological effect of the drug
b) It is a more intense pharmacological effect that occurs at high dose or after prolonged
medication
c) It must involve drug induced cellular injury
d) It involves host defense mechanisms
43) The following statement is true in relation to 'drug toxicity' and 'poisoning':
a) The two terms are synonymous
b) When a toxic effect requires specific treat ment, it is called poisoning
c) A toxic effect which endangers life by markedly affecting vital functions is called poisoning
d) Toxicity is caused by drugs while poisoning is caused by other harmful chemicals
44) An immunologically mediated reaction to a drug producing stereotyped symptoms unrelated to its pharmacodynamic
actions is:
a) Hypersensitivity
b) Supersensitivlty
c) Intolerance
d) Idiosyncrasy
45) Drugs producing allergic reactions generally act as:
a) Complete antigens
b) Haptenes
c) Antibodies
d) Mediators
46) The following allergic drug reaction is caused by circulating antibodies:
a) Serum sickness
b) Anaphylactic shock
c) Systemic lupus erythematosus
d) Angioedema
47) The essential feature in drug addiction is:
a) Physical dependence
b) Psychological dependence
c) Both physical and psychological dependence
d) Psychiatric abnormality
48) Adaptive neurophysiological changes produced by repeated administration of a drug, which result in the
appearance of characteristic withdrawal syndrome on discontinuation of the drug is called:
a) Drug addiction
b) Drug abuse
c) Psychological dependence
d) Physical dependence
49) Initial bradycardia caused by intramuscular injection of atropine is believed to be caused by:
a) Stimulation of medullary vagal centre
b) Stimulation of vagal ganglia
c) Blockade of M2 receptors on SA nodal cells
d) Blockade of muscarinic autoreceptors on vagal nerve endings
50) Atropine does not exert relaxant/antispasmodic effect on the following muscle:
a) Intestinal
b) Ureteric
c) Bronchial
d) Laryngeal
51) Atropine produces the following actions except:
a) Tachycardia
b) Mydriasis
c) Dryness of mouth
d) Urinary incontinence
52) The organ most sensitive to actions of atropine is:
a) Gastric glands
b) Salivary glands
c) Urinary bladder muscle
d) Heart
53) Hyoscine differs from atropine in that it:
a) Exerts depressant effects on the CNS at relatively low doses
b) Exerts more potent effects on the heart than on the eye
c) Is longer acting
d) Has weaker antimotion sickness activity
54) The quaternary analogues of belladonna alkaloids are preferred over the natural alkaloids for
antisecretory/antispasmodic indications because:
a) They have additional nicotinic receptor blocking activity
b) They are incompletely absorbed after oral administration
c) They are devoid of CNS and ocular effects
d) Dose to dose they are more potent than atropine
i) (Note: Many quarternary anticholinergics do have additional nicotinic blocking activity and because of
high ionization they are incompletely absorbed. But the reason for preferring them is lack of central and
ocular effects. Most compounds are dose to dose less potent than atropine.)
55) Inhaled ipratropium bromide has the following advan tages except:
a) It does not alter respiratory secretions
b) Itdoesnotdepressairwaymucociliaryclearance
c) It has faster onset of bronchodllator action than Inhaled salbutamol
d) It only rarely produces systemic side effects
56) Children are more susceptible than adults to the following action ofatropine:
a) Tachycardia producing
b) Cycloplegic
c) Gastric antisecretory
d) Central excitant and hyperthermic
57) Glycopyrrolate is the preferred antimuscarinic drug for use before and during surgery because:
a) It is potent and fast acting
b) It has no central action
c) It has antisecretory and vagolytic actions
d) All of the above
58) Choose the relatively vasicoselective anticholinergic drug used for urinary frequency and urge incontinence due to
detrusor instability:
a) Pirenzepine
b) Oxybutynin
c) Oxyphenonium
d) Glycopyrolate
59) Which of the following mydriatics has the fastest and briefest action:
a) Atropine
b) Homatropine
c) Tropicamide
d) Cyclopentolate
60) The following mydriatic does not produce cycloplegia:
a) Phenylephrine
b) Tropicamide
c) Cyclopentolate
d) Homatropine
61) The most suitable mydriatic for a patient of cornea/ulcer is:
a) Atropine sulfate
b) Homatropine
c) Cyclopentolate
d) Tropicamide
62) The mydriatic incapable of producing cycloplegia sufficient for refraction testing in children is:
a) Atropine
b) Hyoscine
c) Homatropine
d) Cyclopentolate
63) Choose the correct statement about drotaverine:
a) It is a smooth muscle antispasmodic acting by non- anticholinergic mechanisms
b) It is a papaverine congener used in peripheral vascular diseases
c) It is a synthetic atropine substitute used to control diarrhea
d) It is a M1/M3 selective antagonist used for spastic constipation
64) The most effective antidote for belladonna poisoning is:
a) Neostigmlne
b) Physostigmine
c) Pilocarpine
d) Methacholine
65) Atropine is contraindicated in:
a) Pulmonary embolism
b) Digitalis toxicity
c) Iridocyclitis
d) Raised intraocular tension
66) Choose the correct statement about nicotine:
a) It selectively stimulates parasympathetic ganglia
b) It has no clinical application
c) It is used as an aid during smoking cessation
d) It is used in Alzheimer's disease
67) Ganglion blocking drugs are no longer used in therapeutics because:
a) They have few and weak pharmacological actions
b) They produce many side effects
c) They are inactive by oral route
d) They have short duration of action
68) Which of the following drugs is a nondepoiarizing neummuscular blocker:
a) Succinylcholine
b) Vecuronium
c) Decamethonium
d) Dantrolene sodium
69) The site of action of d-tubocurarine is:
a) Spinal internuncial neurone
b) Motor nerve ending
c) Muscle end-plate
d) Sodium channels in the muscle fiber
70) At the muscle end-plate, d-tubocurarine reduces the:
a) Number of Na+ channels
b) Duration for which the Na+ channels remain open
c) Ion conductance of the open Na+ channel
d) Frequency of Na+ channel opening
71) Depolarizing neuromuscularblockers differ from competitive blockers in the following attributes except:
a) They induce contraction of isolated frog rectus abdomtnts muscle
b) Ether anaesthesia intensifies block produced by them
c) Tetanic nerve stimulation during partial depolarizing block produces well sustained contraction
d) Neostigmine does not reverse block produced by them
72) Succinylcholine produces spastic paralysis in:
a) Rabbits
b) Frogs
c) Birds
d) Patients with atypical pseudocholinesterase
73) The fall in blood pressure caused by d-tubocurarine is due to:
a) Reduced venous return
b) Ganglionic blockade
c) Histamine release
d) All of the above
74) Select the skeletal muscle relaxant that is commonly used for endotracheal intubation despite causing histamine
release, K+ efflux from muscles and cardiovascuiar changes:
a) Pipecuroniun
b) Succinylcholine
c) Pancuronium
d) Cisatracurium
75) Neuromuscular blocking drugs do not produce central actions because:
a) They do not cross the blood-brain barrier
b) Nicotinlc receptors are not present in the brain
c) They are sequestrated in the periphery by tight binding to the skeletal muscles
d) They do not ionise at the brain pH
76) Pancuronium differs from tubocurarine in that:
a) It is a depolarizing blocker
b) Its action is not reversed by neostigmine
c) It can cause rise in BP on rapid I.V. injection
d) It causes marked histamine release
77) Which of the following drugs undergoes 'Hofmann' elimination:
a) Succinylcholine
b) Pancuronium
c) Vecuronium
d) Atracurium
78) The neuromuscular blocker that does not need reversal of action by neostigmine at the end of the operation is:
a) d-Tubocurarine
b) Doxacurium
c) Pipecuronium
d) Mivacurium
79) The most rapidly acting nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking agent which can be used as an alternative to
succinylcholine for tracheal intubation is:
a) Rocuronium
b) Pancuronium
c) Doxacurium
d) Pipecuronium
80) Succinylcholine is the preferred muscle relaxant for tracheal intubation because:
a) It produces rapid and complete paralysis of respiratory muscles with quick recovery
b) It does not alter heart rate or blood pressure
c) It does not cause histamine release
d) It does not produce postoperative muscle soreness
81) Which of the following is applicable to mivacurium:
a) It undergoes Hoffmann elimination
b) It is the shortest acting nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocker
c) It is excreted unchanged by kidney
d) It does not cause histamine release
82) Neostigmine reverses the following actions of d-tubocurahne except:
a) Motor weakness
b) Ganglionic blockade
c) Histamine release
d) Respiratory paralysis
83) Postoperative muscle soreness maybe a side effect of the following neuromuscular blocker:
a) d-tubocurarine
b) Succinylcholine
c) Pancuronium
d) Atracurium
84) The following antibiotic accentuates the nuromuscular blockade produced bypancuronium:
a) Streptomycin
b) Erythromycln
c) Penicillin G
d) Chloramphenicol
85) Which of the following is a centrally acting skeletal muscle relaxant:
a) Carisoprodol
b) Dantrolene sodium
c) Quinine
d) Decamethonium
86) 40 Select the muscle relaxant that is used to control spasticity associated with upper motor neurone paralysis:
a) Vecuronium
b) Succlnylcholine
c) Chlorzoxazone
d) Baclofen
87) The following is a skeletal muscle relaxant that acts as a central α2 adrenergic agonist:
a) Tizanldine
b) Brimonidine
c) Chlormezanone
d) Quinine
88) Indications of centrally acting muscle relaxants include all of the following except:
a) Balanced anaesthesia
b) Traumatic muscle spasms
c) Torticollis
d) Electroconvulsive therapy
89) The rate limiting enzyme in the synthesis of catecholamines is:
a) Tyrosine hydroxylase
b) Dopa decarboxylase
c) Dopamine β-hydroxylase
d) Noradrenaline N-methyl transferase
90) The following type/types of noradrenaline uptake is blocked by reserpine:
a) Axonal uptake
b) Granular uptake
c) Extraneuronal uptake
d) All of the above
91) The β3 adrenoceptor differs from the other subtypes of β receptor in that it:
a) Is not blocked by the conventional doses of propranolol
b) Is located primarily in the heart
c) Regulates blood sugar level
d) Is not coupled to G proteins
92) The α2 adrenoceptors are:
a) Located exclusively on the adrenergic nerve endings
b) Prejunctional, postjunctional as well as extrajunctional in location
c) Selectively activated by phenylephrine
d) Selectively blocked by clonidine
93) The following is a selective α2 adrenoceptor antagonist:
a) Prazosin
b) Phentolamine
c) Yohimbine
d) Clonidine
94) The following sympathomimetic amine has agonistic action on α1 + α2 + β1 + β3 adrenoceptors, but not on β2
receptors:
a) Adrenaline
b) Noradrenaline
c) Isoprenaline
d) Phenylephrine
95) The following action of adrenaline is mediated by both α and β receptors producing the same directional effect:
a) Cardiac stimulation
b) Intestinal relaxation
c) Dilatation of pupil
d) Bronchodilatation
96) The following action of adrenaline is not mediated by β receptors:
a) Dilatation of blood vessels
b) Dilatation of pupil
c) Bronchodilation
d) Renin release from kidney
97) Low doses of adrenaline dilate the following vascular bed:
a) Cutaneous
b) Mucosal
c) Renal
d) Skeletal muscle
98) Vasomotor reversal phenomenon after administration of an α adrenergic blocker is seen with:
a) Adrenaline
b) Noradrenaline
c) Isoprenaline
d) All of the above drugs
99) Adrenaline is inactive orally because it is:
a) Not absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract
b) Destroyed by gastric acid
c) Completely metabolized in the intestinal mucosa and liver before reaching systemic circulation
d) Taken up by adrenergic nerve endings of the intestinal wall, liver and lungs
100) Adrenaline raises blood glucose level by the following actions except:
a) Inducing hepatic glycogenolysis
b) Inhibiting insulin secretion from pancreatic β cells
c) Augmenting glucagon secretion from pancreatic α cells
d) Inhibiting peripheral glucose utilization
101) The metabolic actions of adrenaline include the following except:
a) Glycogenolysis in liver and muscle
b) Inhibition of neoglucogenesis in liver
c) Lipolysis in adipose tissue
d) Release of potassium from liver followed by its uptake
102) Noradrenaline is administered by:
a) Subcutaneous injection
b) Intramuscular injection
c) Slow intravenous infusion
d) All of the above routes
103) Dopaminergic D1 and D2 as well as adrenergic α and β1, but not β2, receptors are activated by:
a) Dopamine
b) Dobutamine
c) Methoxamine
d) Phenylephrine
104) Dobutamine differs from dopamine in that:
a) It does not activate peripheral dopaminergic receptors
b) It does not activate adrenergic β receptors
c) It causes pronounced tachycardia
d) It has good blood-brain barrier penetrability
105) Choose the drug which is used as a short-term inotropic in severe congestive heart failure and has selective
adrenergic β1 agonistic activity but no dopaminergic agonistic activity:
a) Dopamine
b) Dobutamine
c) Amrinone
d) Salmeterol
106) Ephedrine is similar to adrenaline in the following feature:
a) Potency
b) Inability to penetrate blood-brain barrier
c) Duration of action
d) Producing both α and β adrenergic effects
107) At therapeutic doses, actions of amphetamine include the following except:
a) Prolongation of attention span
b) Wakefulness
c) Lowering of seizure threshold
d) Delaying fatigue
108) Vasoconstrictors should not be used in:
a) Neurogenic shock
b) Haemorrhagic shock
c) Secondary shock
d) Hypotension due to spinal anaesthesia
109) Adrenaline injected with a local anaesthetic:
a) Reduces local toxicity of the local anaesthetic
b) Reduces systemic toxicity of the local anaesthetic
c) Shortens duration of local anaesthesia
d) Makes the injection less painful
110) The most likely complication of prolonged use of nasal decongestant drops is:
a) Atrophic rhinitis
b) Hypertrophy of nasal mucosa
c) Naso-pharyngeal monlliasis
d) Blockage of eustachian tubes
111) Adrenergic neurone blocking drugs:
a) Block the action of adrenaline on neuronal α2 adrenoceptors
b) Block both α and β adrenoceptor mediated effects of injected adrenaline
c) Do not block any effect of injected adrenaline
d) Do not block the effects of sympathetic nerve stimulation
112) The nonselective α adrenergic blockers produce the following actions except:
a) Postural hypotension
b) Bradycardia
c) Miosis
d) Inhibition of ejaculation
113) The drug which produces vasoconstriction despite being an α adrenergic blocker is:
a) Phenoxybenzamine
b) Ergotamine
c) Dihydroergotoxine
d) Tolazoline
114) The bladder trigone and prostatic muscles are relaxed by:
a) Adrenergic α1 agonists
b) Adrenergic α1 antagonists
c) Adrenergic α2 agonists
d) Adrenergic α2 antagonists
115) The primary reason for preferring phentolamine as the α adrenergic blocker for performing diagnostic test for
pheochromocytoma is:
a) It produces rapid and short lasting α-adrenergic blockade
b) It equally blocks αl and α2 adrenoceptors
c) It is the most potent α blocker
d) It has no additional β adrenergic blocking property
116) Prazosin is an effective antihypertensive while nonselective α adrenergic blockers are not because:
a) It is the only orally active α blocker
b) It improves plasma lipid profile
c) It does not concurrently enhance noradrenaline release
d) It improves urine flow in males with prostatic hypertrophy
117) Select the drug which affords faster and greater symptomatic relief in benign hypertrophy of prostate:
i) Terazosin
ii) Desmopressin
iii) Finasteride
iv) Sildenafil
118) Select the drug which can improve urinary flow rate in benign prostatic hypertrophy without affecting prostate
size:
a) Amphetamine
b) Prazosin
c) Finasteride
d) Goserelin
119) Which of the following is a selective αlA receptor blocker that affords symptomatic relief in benign prostatic
hypertrophy without producing significant fall in blood pressure:
a) Terazosin
b) Doxazosin
c) Trimazosin
d) Tamsulosin
120) Sildenafil is contraindicated in patients taking the following class of drugs:
a) α-adrenergic blockers
b) β-adrenergic blockers
c) Organic nitrates
d) Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors
121) What is true of Sildenafil:
a) It enhances sexual enjoyment in normal men
b) It delays ejaculation
c) It improves penile tumescence in men with erectile dysfunction
d) It blocks cavernosal α2 adrenoceptors
122) The β adrenergic blocker having β1, selectivity, intrinsic sympathomimetic activity and membrane stabilizing
property is:
a) Carvedilol
b) Atenolol
c) Acebutolol
d) Metoprolol
123) All of the following contribute to the antihypertensive action of propranolol except:
a) Direct vasodilatation
b) Decreased renin release from kidney
c) Adaptation of blood vessels to reduced cardiac output
d) Less noradrenaline release from sympathetic nerve endings
124) The effect of propranolol on heart rate is least marked under the following condition:
a) Physical exercise
b) Rest
c) Anxiety
d) Sick sinus syndrome
125) Propranolol can be used to allay anxiety associated with:
a) Chronic neurotic disorder
b) Schizophrenia
c) Short-term stressful situations
d) Endogenous depression
126) Propranolol does not block the following action of adrenaline:
a) Bronchodilatation
b) Lipolysis
c) Muscle tremor
d) Mydriasis
127) β-adrenergic blockers are indicated in the following conditions except:
a) Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
b) Congestive heart failure
c) Vasospastic angina pectoris
d) Dissecting aortic aneurysm
128) In patients of congestive heart failure, β-adrenergic blockers:
a) Are absolutely contraindicated
b) Can prolong survival
c) Can improve haemodynamics after compensation has been restored
d) Both B and C are correct
129) The basis for use of β-adrenergic blockers in congestive heart failure (CHF) is:
a) They exert positive inotropic effect in CHF
b) They counteract deleterious effect of sympathetic overactivity on the myocardium
c) They exert antiischaemic effect on the heart
d) They prevent cardiac arrhythmias
130) Adrenergic β1, selective blockers offer the following advantages except:
a) Lower propensity to cause bronchospasm
b) Less prone to produce cold hands and feet as side effect
c) Withdrawal is less likely to exacerbate angina pectoris
d) Less liable to impair exercise capacity
131) The following is not a feature of cardioselective beta blockers, when compared to propranolol:
a) They are ineffective in suppressing muscle tremor
b) They are safer in diabetics
c) They are less likely to cause bradycardia
d) They are less likely to worsen Raynaud's disease
132) In a patient of myocardial infarction, β adrenergic blockers are used with the following aim/aims:
a) To reduce the incidence of reinfarction
b) To prevent cardiac arrhythmias
c) To limit size of the infarct
d) All of the above
133) The clinically used local anaesthetics have the following common features except:
a) They are amphiphilic weak bases
b) They are used for surgery in non-cooperative patients
c) In their use, care of vital functions is generally not needed
d) They are safer than general anaesthetics in patients with respiratory and cardiovascular disease
134) The local anaesthetics having amide linkage differ from those having ester linkage in that the amidelinked
local anaesthetics:
a) Are not surface anaesthetics
b) Have a shorter duration of action
c) Are degraded in the plasma
d) Do not show cross-sensitivity with esterlinked local anaesthetics
135) The following is not true of local anaesthetics:
a) The local anaesthetic is required in the unionized form for penetrating the neuronal membrane
b) The local anaesthetic approaches its receptor only from the intraneuronal face ofthe Na + channel
c) The local anaesthetic binds to its receptor mainly when the Na+ channel is in the resting state
d) The local anaesthetic combines with its receptor in the ionized cationic form
136) Local anaesthetics block nerve conduction by:
a) Blocking all cation channels in the neuronal membrane
b) Hyperpolarizing the neuronal membrane
c) Interfering with depolarization of the neuronal membrane
d) Both 'B' and 'C' are correct
137) A resting nerve is relatively resistant to blockade by lignocaine compared to one which is repeatedly stimulated
because:
a) Lignocaine penetrates resting nerve membrane poorly
b) Lignocaine binds more avidly to the inactivated Na+ channel
c) Nerve impulse promotes ionization of lignocaine
d) Nodes of Ranvier are inaccessible in the resting state
138) Which of the following is not the reason for greater susceptibility of smaller sensory fibres to blockade by local
anaesthetics than larger motor fibres:
a) Sensory fibres are inherently more sensitive than motor fibres
b) More slender fibres have shorter internodal distances
c) Small sensory fibres generate higher frequency longer lasting action potential
d) Smaller fibres have shorter critical lengths for blockade
139) Which sensation is blocked first by low concentrations of a local anaesthetic:
a) Pain
b) Temperature
c) Touch
d) Deep pressure
140) Injection of adrenaline along with a local anaesthetic serves the following purpose:
a) Lowers the concentration of the local anaesthetic to produce nerve block
b) Prolongs the duration of local anaesthesia
c) Increases the anaesthetised area
d) Reduces the local toxicity of the local anaesthetic
141) Adrenaline added to local anaesthetic solution for infiltration anaesthesia affords the following except:
a) Prolongs the duration of local anaesthesia
b) Makes the injection less painful
c) Provides a more bloodless field for surgery
d) Reduces systemic toxicity of the local anaesthetic
142) Toxicity of local anaesthetics involves the following organs except:
a) Heart
b) Brain
c) Kidney
d) Skin and subcutaneous tissue
143) Which of the following is a poor surface anaesthetic:
a) Procaine
b) Lignocaine
c) Tetracaine
d) Benoxinate
144) The local anaesthetic having high cardiotoxic and arrhythmogenic potential is:
a) Lignocaine
b) Procaine
c) Bupivacaine
d) Ropivacaine
145) Low concentration of bupivacaine is preferred for spinal/epidural obstetric analgesia because:
a) It has a longer duration of action
b) It can produce sensory blockade without paralysing abdominal muscles
c) It distributes more in maternal tissues so that less reaches the foetus
d) All of the above are correct
146) Eutectic lignocaine-prilocaine has the following unique property:
a) It causes motor blockade without sensory block
b) By surface application, it can anaesthetise unbroken skin
c) It is not absorbed after surface application
d) It has strong vasoconstrictor action (
147) Surface anaesthesia is usedforthe following except:
a) Ocular tonometry
b) Urethral dilatation
c) Tooth extraction
d) Anal fissure (p
148) In which of the following techniques the concentration of the local anaesthetic used is the lowest:
a) Infiltration anaesthesia
b) Nerve block anaesthesia
c) Spinal anaesthesia
d) Epidural anaesthesia
149) In spinal anaesthesia the segmental level of:
a) Sympathetic block is lower than the sensory block
b) Sympathetic block is higher than the sensory block
c) Motor block is higher than the sensory block
d) Sympathetic, motor and sensory block has the same level
150) The following factor is not involved in the causation of hypotension due to spinal anaesthesia:
a) Histamine release
b) Reduced sympathetic vasoconstrictor tone
c) Decreased venous return from the lower limbs
d) Bradycardia
151) Spinal anaesthesia is not suitable for:
a) Vaginal delivery
b) Lower segment caesarian section
c) Prostatectomy
d) Operations on mentally ill patients
152) Epidural anaesthesia differs from spinal anaesthesia in that:
a) Epidural anaesthesia produces less cardiovascular complications
b) Headache is more common after epidural anaesthesia
c) Blood concentrations of the local anaesthetic are lower after epidural anaesthesia
d) Greater separation between sensory and motor blockade can be obtained with epidural anaesthesia
a) Pulse rate
b)Body weight
c) Serum thyroxine level
d)Serum TSH level
630) Actions of thyroxine include the following except:
a) Induction of negative nitrogen balance
b) Reduction in plasma cholesterol level
c) Fall in plasma free fatty acid level
d) Rise in blood sugar level
631) Complications of over treatment with thyroxine include the following except:
a) Auricular fibrillation
b) Angina pectoris
c) Congestive heart failure
d) Acceleration of atherosclerosis
632) Thyroxine therapy is indicated in the following conditions except:
a) Euthyroid status with raised TSH level
b) Diffuse nontoxic goiter
c) Nonfunctional thyroid nodule
d) Benign functioning thyroid nodule
633) Triiodothyronine is preferred over thyroxine in the treatment of:
a) Endemic goiter
b) Cretinism
c) Papillary carcinoma of thyroid
d) Myxoedema coma
634) The following thyroid inhibitor does not produce goiter when given in overdose:
a) Propylthiouracil
b) Carbimazole
c) Radioactive iodine
d) Sodium thiocyanate
635) Carbimazole acts by inhibiting:
a) Iodide trapping
b) Oxidation of iodide
c) Proteolysis of thyroglobulin
d) Synthesis of thyroglobulin protein
636) Antithyroid drugs exert the following action:
a) Inhibit thyroxine synthesis
b) Block the action of thyroxine on pituitary
c) Block the action of TSH on thyroid
d) Block the action of thyroxine on peripheral tissues
637) The following thyroid inhibitor interferes with peripheral conversion of thyroxine to triiodothyronine:
a) Propylthiouracil
b) Methimazole
c) Carbimazole
d) Radioactive iodine
638) The thyroid inhibitor which produces the fastest response is:
a) Lugol's iodine
b) Radioactive iodine
c) Propylthiouracil
d) Lithium carbonate
639) Choose the correct statement about carbimazole:
a) It induces improvement in thyrotoxic symptoms after 1 - 4 weeks therapy
b) Control of thyrotoxic symptoms with carbimazole is accompanied by enlargement of thyroid gland
c) Its long term use in Grave's disease leads to 'thyroid escape'
d) It mitigates thyrotoxic symptoms without lowering serum thyroxine levels
640) In the treatment of hyperthyroidism, carbimazole has the following advantage over radioactive iodine:
a) Cost of treatment is lower
b) It is preferable in uncooperative patient
c) It is better tolerated by the patients
d) Hypothyroidism when induced is reversible
641) The aim of iodine therapy before subtotal thyroidectomy in Grave's disease is:
a) To render the patient euthyroid
b) To restore the iodine content of the thyroid gland
c) To inhibit peripheral conversion of thyroxine into triiodothyronine
d) To reduce friability and vascularity of the thyroid gland
642) Insulin release from pancreatic β-cells is augmented by the following except:
a) Ketone bodies
b) Glucagon
c) Vagal stimulation
d) Alfa adrenergic agonists
643) The major limitation of the thiazolidinediones in the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus is:
a) Frequent hypoglycaemic episodes
b) Hyperinsulinemia
c) Lactic acidosis
d) Low hypoglycaemic efficacy in moderate to severe cases
644) The most common adverse reaction to insulin is:
a) Hypoglycaemia
b) Lipodystrophy
c) Urticaria
d) Angioedema
645) Which of the following is true of counterregulatory symptoms of insulin hypoglycaemia:
a) They generally appear before neurogluco-penic symptoms
b) They are accentuated after long-term insulin treatment
c) They result from parasympathetic activation
d) They manifest as hunger and fatigue
646) There is no alternative to insulin therapy for:
a) All type 1 diabetes mellitus patients
b) All type 2 diabetes mellitus patients
c) Type 2 diabetes patients not controlled by a sulfonylurea drug
d) Type 2 diabetes patients not controlled by a biguanide drug
647) In a patient of diabetes mellitus maintained on insulin therapy, administration of the following drug can vitiate glycaemia control:
a) Prednisolone
b) Prazosin
c) Paracetamol
d) Phenytoin
648) Which of the following is not a specific indication for the more expensive monocomponent/human insulins:
a) Insulin resistance
b) Pregnant diabetic
c) Sulfonylurea maintained diabetic posted for surgery
d) Type 1 diabetes mellitus
649) The second generation sulfonylurea hypoglycaemics differ from the first generation ones in that they:
a) Are more potent
b) Are longer acting
c) Do not lower blood sugar in nondiabetic subjects
d) Are less prone to cause hypoglycaemic reaction
650) Metformin is preferred overphenformin because:
a) It is more potent
b) It is less liable to cause lactic acidosis
c) It does not interfere with vitamin B12 absorption
d) It is not contraindicated in patients with kidney disease
651) Sulfonylureas do not lower blood sugar level in:
a) Nondiabetics
b) Type 1 diabetics
c) Type 2 diabetics
d) Obese diabetics
652) The hypoglycaemic action of sulfonylureas is likely to be attenuated by the concurrent use of:
a) Hydrochlorothiazide
b) Propranolol
c) Theophylline
d) Aspirin
653) Metformin causes little lowering of blood sugar level in:
a) Nondiabetics
b) Obese diabetics
c) Type 2 diabetics
d) Diabetics not responding to sulfonylureas
654) Choose the correct statement about nateglinide:
a) It is a long acting oral hypoglycaemic drug
b) Taken just before a meal, it limits postprandial hyperglycaemia in type 2 diabetes mellitus
c) It lowers blood glucose in both type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus
d) It acts by opening K+ channels in myocytes and adipocytes
655) Which of the following is not a sulfonylurea but acts by analogous mechanism to bring about quick and brief insulin release that is useful for
normalizing meal time glycaemic excursions in type 2 diabetes mellitus:
a) Glimepiride
b) Miglitol
c) Repaglinide
d) Rosiglitazone
656) Metformin acts by:
a) Releasing insulin from pancreas
b) Suppressing gluconeogenesis and glucose output from liver
c) Up regulating insulin receptors
d) Inhibiting degradation of insulin
657) The thiazolidinediones are mainly used as:
a) Sole drug in type 1 diabetes mellitus
b) Sole drug in type 2 diabetes mellitus
c) Addon drug to a sulfonylurea and/or a biguanide in type 2 diabetes mellitus
d) Addon drug to insulin in type 1 diabetes mellitus
658) The present status of oral hypoglycaemics in diabetes mellitus is:
a) They are the first choice drug in all cases
b) They should be prescribed only if the patient refuses insulin injections
c) They are used only in type I diabetes mellitus
d) They are used first in most uncomplicated mild to moderate type 2
659) The following feature disfavours use of oral hypoglycaemics in diabetes mellitus:
a) Age at onset of disease over 40 years
b) Insulin requirement more than 40 U/day
c) Fasting blood sugar level between 100-200 mg/dl
d) Associated obesity
660) Which of the following is true of acarbose:
a) It reduces absorption of glucose from intestines
b) It produces hypoglycaemia in normal as well as diabetic subjects
c) It limits postprandial hyperglycaemia in diabetics
d) It raises circulating insulin levels
661) The following antidiabetic drug inhibits intestinal brush border a-glucosidase enzymes:
a) Acarbose
b) Pioglitazone
c) Metformin
d) Guargum
662) Guargum limits post-prandial glycaemia by:
a) Inhibiting intestinal brush border a-gluco-sidases
b) Slowing carbohydrate absorption from intestine
c) Releasing incretins from the intestine
d) Promoting uptake of glucose into skeletal muscles
663) Select the drug which tends to reverse insulin resistance by increasing cellular glucose transporters:
a) Glibenclamide
b) Rosiglitazone
c) Acarbose
d) Prednisolone
664) Glucagon release from pancreas is stimulated by:
a) High blood glucose level
b) Insulin
c) Somatostatin
d) Adrenalin
665) The Na+ retaining action of aldosterone is exerted on the:
a) Proximal convoluted tubule
b) Ascending limb of loop of Henle
c) Cortical diluting segment
d) Distal convoluted tubule
666) Aldosterone enhances Na+ reabsorption in renal tubules by:
a) Stimulating carbonic anhydrase
b) Activating Na+ K+ ATPase
c) Inducing the synthesis of Na+ K+ATPase
d) Inducing renal prostaglandin synthesis
667) Hydrocortisone exerts the following actions:
a) Increases both K+ and Ca2+ excretion
b) Decreases both K+ and Ca2+ excretion
c) Decreases K+ but increases Ca2+ excretion
d) Increases K+ but decreases Ca2+ excretion
668) Corticosteroids exert antiinflammatory action by inhibiting the following enzyme:
a) Cyclooxygenase
b) Lipoxygenase
c) Phospholipase-A
d) Phosphodiesterase
669) The most important mechanism of antiinflammatory action of glucocorticoids is:
a) Inhibition of lysosomal enzymes
b) Restriction of recruitment of inflammatory cells at the site of inflammation
c) Antagonism of action of interleukins
d) Suppression of complement function
670) The following glucocorticoid has significant minera-locorticoid activity also:
a) Hydrocortisone
b) Triamcinolone
c) Dexamethasone
d) Betamethasone
671) Select the corticosteroid with the lowest oral: parenteral activity ratio:
a) Prednisolone
b) Methyl prednisolone
c) Hydrocortisone
d) Dexamethasone
672) The corticosteroid preferred for replacement therapy in Addison's disease is:
a) Aldosterone
b) Fludrocortisone
c) Hydrocortisone
d) Betamethasone
673) Corticosteroid therapy is practically mandatory in the following condition:
a) Septic shock
b) Renal transplant
c) Rheumatoid arthritis
d) Ulcerative colitis
674) For limiting cerebral edema due to brain tumour, the preferred corticosteroids are betamethasone/dexamethasone because:
a) They do not cause Na+ and water retention
b) They are more potent
c) They can be administered intravenously
d) They inhibit brain tumours
675) The following adverse effect of corticosteroids is mainly due to their mineralocorticoid action:
a) Osteoporosis
b) Rise in blood pressure
c) 'Moon face'
d) Increased susceptibility to infection
676) The following is not a legitimate indication for the use of anabolic steroids:
a) To enhance the physical ability of sportsmen
b) Suboptimal growth in children
c) Senile osteoporosis
d) Hypoplastic anaemia
677) The following drug has potent antiandrogenic and weak progestational activity:
a) Ethylestrenol
b) Clomiphene citrate
c) Cyproterone acetate
d) Magestrol acetate
678) Which of the following is a non-steroidal antiandrogen that is palliative in advanced carcinoma prostate when combined with a GnRH
agonist:
a) Cyproterone acetate
b) Danazol
c) Finasteride
d) Flutamide
679) Circulating testosterone levels in men are elevated during treatment with:
a) Danazol
b) Finasteride
c) Flutamide
d) Ketoconazole
680) Estrogen therapy in postmenopausal women has been implicated in increasing the risk of the following disorders except:
a) Gall stones
b) Osteoporosis
c) Endometrial carcinoma
d) Breast cancer
681) Metabolic actions of estrogens tend to cause the following except:
a) Anabolism
b) Impaired glucose tolerance
c) Rise in plasma LDL-cholesterol
d) Salt and water retention
682) Estrogens are palliative in the following malignancy:
a) Carcinoma breast
b) Carcinoma cervix
c) Endometrial carcinoma
d) Carcinoma prostate
683) The following is an orally active ovulation inducing agent:
a) Menotropin
b) Mifepristone
c) Danazol
d) Clomiphene citrate
684) What is true of tamoxifen:
a) It can induce endometrial proliferation in postmenopausal women
b) It exerts antiestrogenic activity in bone
c) It raises LDL-cholesterol levels
d) It is ineffective in estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer
685) The primary indication of tamoxiphen citrate is:
a) Female infertility
b) Endometrial carcinoma
c) Carcinoma breast
d) Endometriosis
686) Progesterone administration:
a) Suppresses onset of menstruation
b) Induces watery cervical secretion
c) Sensitizes the uterus to oxytocin
d) Comifies vaginal epithelium
687) Select the drug which administered orally causes cervical ripening in pregnant women to facilitate surgical abortion or induction of labour:
a) Mifepristone
b) Raloxifene
c) Natural progesterone
d) Levonorgestrel
688) Which of the following drugs is an antiprogestin:
a) Gemeprost
b) Megestrol
c) Mifepristone
d) Tamoxifen
689) The most important indication of mifepristone is:
a) Endometriosis
b) Cushing's syndrome
c) First term abortion
d) Second term abortion
690) A progestin and an estrogen are combined in oral contraceptive pill because:
a) The estrogen blocks the side effects of the progestin
b) The progestin blocks the side effects of the estrogen
c) Both synergise to suppress ovulation
d) Both synergise to produce hostile cervical mucus
691) The primary mechanism of action of the combined estrogen-progestin oral contraceptive pill is:
a) Production of cervical mucus hostile to sperm penetration
b) Suppression of FSH and LH release
c) Making endometrium unsuitable for implantation
d) Enhancing uterine contractions to dislodge the fertilized ovum
692) Bone resorption is accelerated by:
a) Estrogens
b) Parathormone
c) Bisphosphonates
d) Calcitonin
693) The drug of choice for hypoparathyroidism is:
a) Parathormone
b) Calcium lactate
c) Vitamin D
d) Pamidronate
694) Choose the antimicrobial which acts by interfering with DNA function in the bacteria:
a) Chloramphenicol
b) Ciprofloxacin
c) Streptomycin
d) Vancomycin
695) Superinfections are more common with:
a) Use of narrow spectrum antibiotics
b) Short courses of antibiotics
c) Use of antibiotics that are completely absorbed from the small Intestines
d) Use of antibiotic combinations covering both gram positive and gram negative bacteria
696) That sulfonamides act by inhibiting folate synthesis in bacteria is supported by the following findings except:
a) Paraaminobenzoic acid antagonises the action of sulfonamides
b) Methionine antagonises the action of sulfonamides
c) Purines and thymidine present in pus antagonize the action of sulfonamides
d) Bacteria that utilise folic acid taken up from the medium are insensitive to sulfonamides
697) Important microbiological features of ciprofloxacin include the following except:
a) Long postantibiotic effect
b) Marked suppression of intestinal anaerobes
c) MBC values close to MIC values
d) Slow development of resistance
698) The most important mechanism by which tetracycline antibiotics exert antimicrobial action is:
a) They chelate Ca2 + ions and alter permeability of bacterial cell membrane
b) They bind to 30S ribosomes and inhibit bacterial protein synthesis
c) They bind to 50S ribosomes and interfere with translocation of the growing peptide chain in the bacteria
d) They interfere with DNA mediated RNA synthesis in bacteria
699) Select the antibiotic which inhibits bacterial protein synthesis by interfering with translocation of elongating peptide chain
from acceptor site back to the peptidyl site of the ribosome so that ribosome does not move along the mRNA and the peptide
chain is prematurely terminated:
a) Chloramphenicol
b) Erythromycin
c) Tetracycline
d) Streptomycin
700) Which antibiotic is primarily bacteriostatic but becomes bactericidal at higher concentrations:
a) Erythromycin
b) Tetracycline
c) Chloramphenicol
d) Ampicillin
701) The most likely explanation of differing sensitivities of different bacteria to various penicillins is:
a) Differing susceptibilities of the various penicillins to (3-lactamases produced by different bacteria
b) Differing affinities of penicillin binding proteins present in different bacteria towards various penicillins
c) Differing penetrability of various penicillins into different bacteria
d) Differing rates of cell wall synthesis by different bacteria
702) Aminoglycoside antibiotics have the following property common to all members:
a) They are primarily active against aerobic gram negative bacilli
b) They are more active in acidic medium
c) They readily enter cells and are distributed in total body water
d) They are nearly completely metabolized in liver
703) Select the antibiotic that has a high therapeutic index:
a) A Streptomycin
b) B. Doxycycline
c) C. Cephalexin
d) D. Vancomycin
704) Select the antibiotic whose dose must be reduced in patients with renal insufficiency:
a) Ampicillin
b) Chloramphenicol
c) Tobramycin
d) Erythromycin
705) The following drug may cure typhoid fever, but does not prevent development of carrier state:
a) Ciprofloxacin
b) Cotrimoxazole
c) Chloramphenicol
d) Ceftriaxone
706) Penicillins interfere with bacterial cell wall synthesis by:
a) Inhibiting synthesis of N-acetyl muramic acid pentapeptide
b) Inhibiting conjugation between N-acetyl muramic acid a n d N-acetyl glucosamine
c) Inhibiting transpeptidases and carboxypeptidases which cross link the peptidoglycan residues
d) Counterfeiting for D-alanine in the bacterial cell wall
707) Which aminoglycoside antibiotic causes more hearing loss than vestibular disturbance as toxic effect:
a) A Streptomycin
b) B. Gentamicin
c) C. Kanamycin
d) Sisomicin
708) The following antibiotic is a first line drug for treatment of Mycobacterium avium complex infection in AIDS patients:
a) Clindamycin
b) Clarithromycin
c) Roxithromycin
d) Erythromycin
709) Select the antibiotic that has a high therapeutic index:
a) A Streptomycin
b) B. Doxycycline
c) C. Cephalexin
d) D. Vancomycin
710) Which antimicrobial should be avoided in patients of liver disease:
a) Tetracycline
b) Cotrimoxazole
c) Cephalexin
d) Ethambutol
711) A higher incidence of adverse effects to cotrimoxazole occurs when this drug is used for:
a) Typhoid fever
b) Whooping cough
c) Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in AIDS patients
d) Chancroid
712) Gram negative organisms are largely insensitive to benzyl penicillin because:
a) They produce large quantities of penicillinase
b) They do not utilise D-alanine whose incorporation in the cell wall is inhibited by benzylpenicillin
c) Benzyl penicillin is not able to penetrate deeper into the lipoprotein-peptidoglycan multilayer cell wall of gram
negative bacteria
d) Both 'A' and 'B' are correct
713) Bacteria develop tetracycline resistance by the following mechanisms except:
a) Losing tetracycline concentrating mechanisms
b) Elaborating tetracycline inactivating enzyme
c) Synthesizing a 'protection protein' which interferes with binding of tetracycline to the target site
d) Actively pumping out tetracycline that has entered the cell
714) Select the class of antibiotics which act by interfering with bacterial protein synthesis, but are bactericidal:
a) Tetracyclines
b) Aminoglycosides
c) Macrolides
d) Lincosamides
715) The following organism is notorious for developing antimicrobial resistance rapidly:
a) Streptococcus pyogenes
b) Meningococcus
c) Treponema pallidum
d) Escherichia coli
716) What is break point concentration of an antibiotic:
a) A Concentration at which the antibiotic lyses the bacteria
b) B. Concentration of the antibiotic which demarcates between sensitive and resistant bacteria
c) C. Concentration of the antibiotic which overcomes bacterial resistance
d) D. Concentration at which a bacteriostatic antibiotic becomes bactericidal
717) Trimethoprim inhibits bacteria without affecting mammalian cells because:
a) It does not penetrate mammalian cells
b) It has high affinity for bacterial but low affinity for mammalian dihydrofolate reductase enzyme
c) It inhibits bacterial folate synthetase as well as dihydrofolate reductase enzymes
d) All of the above
718) The dominant pharmacokinetic feature of penicillin G is:
a) It is equally distributed extra- and intracellularly
b) It Is rapidly secreted by proximal renal tubules
c) It has low oral bioavailability due to high first pass metabolism in liver
d) It does not cross blood-CSF barrier even when meninges are inflamed
719) Choose the correct statement about tetracyclines:
a) Being broad spectrum antibioics they are dependable for empirical treatment of lifethreatening infections
b) Currently, they are not the first choice antibiotic for any specific infection
c) They reduce stool volume and duration of diarrhoea in cholera
d) The are preferred for treatment of anaerobic bacterial infections
720) A single oral dose of the following antibiotic is curative in most patients of nonspecific urethritis due to Chlamydia
trachomatis:
a) Doxycycline
b) Azithromycin
c) Erythromycin
d) Cotrimoxazole
721) The distinctive features of azithromycin include the following except:
a) Efficacy against organisms which have developed resistance to erythromycin
b) Marked tissue distribution and intracellular penetration
c) Long terminal elimination half-life
d) Low propensity to drug interactions due to inhibition of cytochrome P450 enzymes
722) A bactericidal antibiotic has the following characteristic(s):
a) Pronounced postantibiotic effect
b) Large difference between MBC and MIC values
c) Efficacy in the absence of host defence
d) All of the above
723) Indicate the condition in which neither trimethoprim nor sulfamethoxazole alone are effective, but their combination
cotrimoxazole is:
a) Prostatitis
b) Lymphogranuloma venereum
c) Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
d) Bacillary dysentery
724) The penicillin G preparation with the longest duration of action is:
a) Benzathine penicillin
b) Sodium penicillin
c) Potassium penicillin
725) The drug of choice for atypical pneumonia due to Mycoplasma pneumoniae is:
a) Doxycycline
b) Ciprofloxacin
c) Ceftriaxone
d) Gentamicin
726) Select the macrolide antibiotic that can be given once daily for 3 days for empirical treatment of earnosethroat, respiratory
and genital infections:
a) Erythromycin
b) Azithromycin
c) Roxithromycin
d) Clarithromycin
727) Drug destroying type of bacterial resistance is important for the following antibiotics except:
a) Cephalosporins
b) Tetracyclines
c) Chloramphenicol
d) Aminoglycosides
728) The following quinolone antimicrobial agent is not useful in systemic infections:
a) Lomefloxacin
b) Ofloxacin
c) Nalidixic acid
d) Pefloxacin
729) If a patient gives history of urticaria, itching and swelling of lips following injection of penicillin G, then:
a) He will develop similar reaction whenever penicillin is injected
b) He can be given ampicillin safely
c) He can be given oral phenoxymethyl penicillin safely
d) All natural and semisynthetic penicillins are contraindicated for him
730) The most suitable tetracycline for use in a patient with impaired renal function is:
a) Tetracycline
b) Demeclocycline
c) Oxytetracycline
d) Doxycycline
731) The following antibiotic is highly active against anaerobic bacteria including Bacteroides fragilis:
a) Ciprofloxacin
b) Clarithromycin
c) Clindamycin
d) Tobramycin
732) The following strategy will promote rather than curb emergence of antibiotic resistant micro-organisms:
a) Whenever possible use broad spectrum antibiotics
b) Prefer a narrow spectrum antibiotic to a broad spectrum one if both are equally effective
c) Prefer short and intensive courses of antibiotics
d) Use antibiotic combinations for prolonged therapy
733) Which type of antimicrobial drug combination is most likely to exhibit antagonism:
a) Bactericidal + Bactericidal
b) Bactericidal + Bacteriostatic for a highly sensitive organism
c) Bactericidal + Bacteriostatic for a marginally sensitive organism
d) Bacteriostatic + Bacteriostatic
734) The most important reason for highly restricted use of penicillin G injections in present day therapeutics is its:
a) Narrow spectrum of activity
b) Potential to cause hypersensitivity reaction
c) Short duration of action
d) Neurotoxicity
735) The most important mechanism of concurrent acquisition of multidrug resistance among bacteria is:
a) Mutation
b) Conjugation
c) Transduction
d) Transformation
736) Choose the condition which is mostly treated with a combination of antimicrobials:
a) Lobar pneumonia
b) Typhoid
c) Peritonitis
d) Syphilis
737) Select the antimicrobial drug which is used orally only for urinary tract infection or for bacterial diarrhoeas:
a) Nalidixic acid
b) Azithromycin
c) Bacampicillin
d) Pefloxacin
738) Indicate the disease in which penicillin G continues to be used as first line treatment in all cases (unless contraindicated),
because the causative organism has not developed resistance so far:
a) Gonorrhoea
b) Syphilis
c) Staphylococcal abscess
d) Haemophillus influenzae meningitis
739) Which of the following is not a semisynthetic penicillin:
a) Procaine penicillin
b) Ampicillin
c) Cloxacillin
d) Carbenicillin
740) An 8-year-old child presented with brownish discoloured and deformed anterior teeth. History of having received an
antibiotic about 4 years earlier was obtained. Which antibiotic could be responsible for the condition:
a) Chloramphenicol
b) Tetracycline
c) Erythromycin
d) Gentamicin
741) Clavulanic acid is combined with amoxicillin because:
a) It kills bacteria that are not killed by amoxicillin
b) It retards renal excretion of amoxicillin
c) It counteracts the adverse effects of amoxicillin
d) It inhibits beta lactamases that destroy amoxicillin
742) A single oral dose of the following drug can cure most cases of uncomplicated gonorrhoea:
a) Ciprofloxacin
b) Cotrimoxazole
c) Spectinomycin
d) Doxycycline
743) Nalidixic acid is primarily active against:
a) Cocci
b) Bacilli
c) Gram positive bacteria
d) Gram negative bacteria
744) The following strategy will promote rather than curb emergence of antibiotic resistant micro-organisms:
a) Whenever possible use broad spectrum antibiotics
b) Prefer a narrow spectrum antibiotic to a broad spectrum one if both are equally effective
c) Prefer short and intensive courses of antibiotics
d) Use antibiotic combinations for prolonged therapy
745) Which type of antimicrobial drug combination is most likely to exhibit antagonism:
a) Bactericidal + Bactericidal
b) Bactericidal + Bacteriostatic for a highly sensitive organism
c) Bactericidal + Bacteriostatic for a marginally sensitive organism
d) Bacteriostatic + Bacteriostatic
746) The most important reason for highly restricted use of penicillin G injections in present day therapeutics is its:
a) Narrow spectrum of activity
b) Potential to cause hypersensitivity reaction
c) Short duration of action
d) Neurotoxicity
747) Acquisition of inducible energy dependent efflux proteins by bacteria serves to:
a) Secrete exotoxins
b) Enhance virulance
c) Lyse host tissue
d) Confer antibiotic resistance
748) Surgical antibiotic prophylaxis for clean elective surgery started just before operation should be continued for:
a) One day
b) Three days
c) Five days
d) Seven days
749) Though penicillin G kills the causative organism, it is only of adjuvant value to other measures in:
a) Diphtheria
b) Subacute bacterial endocarditis
c) Syphilis
d) Anthrax
750) Bactericidal action of aminoglycoside antibiotics is due to:
a) Inhibition of bacterial protein synthesis
b) Alteration of bacterial cell membrane permeability
c) Damage to bacterial cell wall
d) Inhibition of bacterial oxidative metabolism
751) The drug of choice for treatment of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus infection is:
a) Cloxaclllin
b) Vancomycin
c) Erythromycin
d) Amikacin
752) Benzathine penicillin injected once every 4 weeks for 5 years or more is the drug of choice for:
a) Agranulocytosis patients
b) Prophylaxis of bacterial endocarditis in patients with valvular defects
c) Prophylaxis of rheumatic fever
d) Treatment of anthrax
753) Choose the semisynthetic penicillin which has an extended spectrum of activity against many gram negative bacilli, is acid
resistant but not penicillinase resistant:
a) Cloxacillin
b) Amoxicillin
c) Phenoxymethyl penicillin
d) Piperacillin
754) The most important mechanism of bacterial resistance to an aminoglycoside antibiotic is:
a) Plasmid mediated acquisition of aminoglycoside conjugating enzyme
b) Mutational acquisition of aminoglycoside hydrolysing enzyme
c) Mutation reducing affinity of ribosomal protein for the antibiotic
d) Mutational loss of porin channels
755) Which of the following is a second generation cephalosporin that is highly resistant to gram negative β-lactamases, and cures
penicillinase positive as well as negative gonococcal infection by a single intramuscular dose:
a) Cephalexin
b) Cefuroxime
c) Cefoperazone
d) Ceftazidime
756) Which fluoroquinolone has enhanced activity against gram positive bacteria and anaerobes:
a) Pefloxacin
b) Ciprofloxacin
c) Sparfloxacin
d) Norfloxacin
757) Distinctive features of gatifloxacin include the following except:
a) Higher affinity for the enzyme topoisomerase IV
b) Activity restricted to gram negative bacteria
c) Potential to prolong QTc interval
d) Employed to treat community acquired pneumonia
758) Methicillin resistant staphylococci do not respond to β-lactam antibiotics because:
a) They produce a β -lactamase which destroys methicillin and related drugs
b) They elaborate an amidase which destroys methicillin and related drugs
c) They have acquired penicillin binding protein which has low affinity for β-lactam antibiotics
d) They are less permeable to (β-lactam antibiotics)
759) Which of the following is not likely to be the cause of failure of antimicrobial therapy of an acute infection:
a) Improper selection of drug and dose
b) Acquisition of resistance during treatment
c) Failure to drain the pus
d) Uncontrolled diabetes mellitus
760) Select the fluoroquinolone which has high oral bioavailability, longer elimination half-life and which does not inhibit
metabolism of theophylline:
a) Norfloxacin
b) Pefloxacin
c) Lomefloxacin
d) Ciprofloxacin
761) Cloxacillin is indicated in infections caused by the following organism(s):
a) Staphylococci
b) Streptococci
c) Gonococci
d) All of the above
762) A patient treated with capsule oxytetracycline 500 mg 6 hourly complained of epigastric pain. Which of the following
measures will you recommend to counteract the side effect:
a) Take the capsules with milk
b) Take the capsules with meals
c) Take aluminium hydroxide gel 15 minutes before the capsules
d) None of the above measures is suitable. Change the antibiotic if pain is distressing
763) Streptomycin sulfate is not absorbed orally because it is:
a) Degraded by gastrointestinal enzymes
b) Destroyed by gastric acid
c) Highly ionized at a wide range of pH values
d) Insoluble in water
764) The most common mechanism of development of resistance to fluoroquinolones is:
a) Chromosomal mutation altering affinity of target site
b) Plasmid transfer
c) Acquisition of drug destroying enzyme
d) Acquisition of alternative metabolic pathway
765) The most frequent side effect of oral ampicillin is:
a) Nausea and vomiting
b) Loose motions
c) Constipation
d) Urticaria
766) Chloramphenicol inhibits bacterial protein synthesis by:
a) Binding to 30S ribosome and inhibiting attachment of aminoacyl tRNA
b) Binding to 50S ribosome and preventing peptide bond formation
c) Bindingto50S ribosome a n d blocking translocation of peptide chain
d) Binding to both 30S and 50S ribosome and inducing misreading of mRNA code
767) The following is true for gentamicin:
a) It is more active in acidic medium
b) It has a wide margin of safety
c) It is excreted unchanged , mainly by glomerular filtration
d) It primarily inhibits gram positive bacteria
768) Ciprofloxacin is not active against:
a) H.influenzae
b) E.coli
c) Enterobacter spp.
d) Bacteroides fragilis
769) Amoxicillin is inferior to ampicillin for the treatment of the following infection:
a) Typhoid
b) Shigella enteritis
c) Subacute bacterial endocarditis
d) Gonorrhoea
770) Chloramphenicol is more active than tetracyclines against:
a) Bateroides fragilis
b) Treponema pallidum
c) Streptococci
d) Staphylococci
771) Piperacillin differs from carbenicillin in the following respect(s):
a) It is more active against Pseudomonas aeruginosa
b) It is active against Klebsiella as well
c) It is acid resistant
d) Both ‘A’ and 'B' are correct
772) The following antibiotic penetrates blood-CSF barrier the best:
a) Erythromycin
b) Gentamicin
c) Tetracycline
d) Chloramphenicol
773) The aminoglycoside antibiotic which is distinguished by its resistance to bacterial aminoglycoside inactivating enzymes is:
a) Kanamycin
b) Sisomicin
c) Amikacin
d) Tobramycin
774) Select the semisynthetic penicillin which is not acid resistant:
a) Phenoxymethylpenicillin
b) Ampicillin
c) Carbenicillin
d) Cloxacillin
775) The most important mechanism by which gram negative bacilli acquire chloramphenicol resistance is:
a) Decreased permeability into the bacterial cell
b) Acquisition of a plasmid encoded for chloramphenicol acetyl transferase
c) Lowered affinity of the bacterial ribosome for chloramphenicol
d) Switching over from ribosomal to mitochondrial protein synthesis
776) Amoxicillin + Clavulanic acid is active against the following organisms except:
a) Methicillin resistant Staph. aureus
b) Penicillinase producing Staph. Aureus
c) Penicillinase producing N.gonorrhoeae
d) β-lactamase producing E.coli
777) Methicillin resistant staphylococci do not respond to β-lactam antibiotics because:
a) They produce a β -lactamase which destroys methicillin and related drugs
b) They elaborate an amidase which destroys methicillin and related drugs
c) They have acquired penicillin binding protein which has low affinity for β-lactam antibiotics
d) They are less permeable to (β-lactam antibiotics)
778) Which of the following is not likely to be the cause of failure of antimicrobial therapy of an acute infection:
a) Improper selection of drug and dose
b) Acquisition of resistance during treatment
c) Failure to drain the pus
d) Uncontrolled diabetes mellitus
779) Select the fluoroquinolone which has high oral bioavailability, longer elimination half-life and which does not inhibit
metabolism of theophylline:
a) Norfloxacin
b) Pefloxacin
c) Lomefloxacin
d) Ciprofloxacin
780) Cloxacillin is indicated in infections caused by the following organism(s):
a) Staphylococci
b) Streptococci
c) Gonococci
d) All of the above
781) A patient treated with capsule oxytetracycline 500 mg 6 hourly complained of epigastric pain. Which of the following
measures will you recommend to counteract the side effect:
a) Take the capsules with milk
b) Take the capsules with meals
c) Take aluminium hydroxide gel 15 minutes before the capsules
d) None of the above measures is suitable. Change the antibiotic if pain is distressing
782) Streptomycin sulfate is not absorbed orally because it is:
a) Degraded by gastrointestinal enzymes
b) Destroyed by gastric acid
c) Highly ionized at a wide range of pH values
d) Insoluble in water
783) The most common mechanism of development of resistance to fluoroquinolones is:
a) Chromosomal mutation altering affinity of target site
b) Plasmid transfer
c) Acquisition of drug destroying enzyme
d) Acquisition of alternative metabolic pathway
784) The most frequent side effect of oral ampicillin is:
a) Nausea and vomiting
b) Loose motions
c) Constipation
d) Urticaria
785) Chloramphenicol inhibits bacterial protein synthesis by:
a) Binding to 30S ribosome and inhibiting attachment of aminoacyl tRNA
b) Binding to 50S ribosome and preventing peptide bond formation
c) Bindingto50S ribosome a n d blocking translocation of peptide chain
d) Binding to both 30S and 50S ribosome and inducing misreading of mRNA code
786) The following is true for gentamicin:
a) It is more active in acidic medium
b) It has a wide margin of safety
c) It is excreted unchanged , mainly by glomerular filtration
d) It primarily inhibits gram positive bacteria
787) Ciprofloxacin is not active against:
a) H.influenzae
b) E.coli
c) Enterobacter spp.
d) Bacteroides fragilis
788) Amoxicillin is inferior to ampicillin for the treatment of the following infection:
a) Typhoid
b) Shigella enteritis
c) Subacute bacterial endocarditis
d) Gonorrhoea
789) Chloramphenicol is more active than tetracyclines against:
a) Bateroides fragilis
b) Treponema pallidum
c) Streptococci
d) Staphylococci
790) The following antibiotic penetrates blood-CSF barrier the best:
a) Erythromycin
b) Gentamicin
c) Tetracycline
d) Chloramphenicol
791) The aminoglycoside antibiotic which is distinguished by its resistance to bacterial aminoglycoside inactivating enzymes is:
a) Kanamycin
b) Sisomicin
c) Amikacin
d) Tobramycin
792) Select the semisynthetic penicillin which is not acid resistant:
a) Phenoxymethylpenicillin
b) Ampicillin
c) Carbenicillin
d) Cloxacillin
793) The most important mechanism by which gram negative bacilli acquire chloramphenicol resistance is:
a) Decreased permeability into the bacterial cell
b) Acquisition of a plasmid encoded for chloramphenicol acetyl transferase
c) Lowered affinity of the bacterial ribosome for chloramphenicol
d) Switching over from ribosomal to mitochondrial protein synthesis
794) Amoxicillin + Clavulanic acid is active against the following organisms except:
a) Methicillin resistant Staph. aureus
b) Penicillinase producing Staph. Aureus
c) Penicillinase producing N.gonorrhoeae
d) β-lactamase producing E.coli