NCLEX-RN · Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies · Tamil Nadu, India
Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies for the NCLEX-RN Exam — Tamil Nadu candidates
15% of the NCLEX-RN test plan. Pharmacology questions test medication classes, mechanisms, side effects, contraindications, and parenteral / IV calculations. Calibrated for Tamil candidates.
Behind every published pass rate is a distribution of which topics caused most of the failures. This is one of those topics. Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies sits at roughly 15% of the National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses content distribution — Pharmacology is 12–18% of the NCLEX-RN test plan and one of the most commonly missed areas, especially for internationally educated nurses. The questions emphasise nursing actions (what to monitor, what to teach, what to discontinue) rather than rote drug-name memorisation. Pass rates for the NCLEX-RN are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Tamil Nadu candidates preparing for NCLEX-RN, the calibration of study to local context matters: Tamil Nadu uses 7.5% NEET government-school reservation and runs separate state-quota counselling. JEE Main and GATE candidate volumes are second only to Maharashtra.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Memorising drug names without mechanism — NCLEX questions test "what to monitor" not "what is this drug"
- !Confusing similar-sounding drugs (e.g., hydralazine vs hydroxyzine; clonidine vs Klonopin)
- !Missing the priority intervention when two side effects are presented
- !Wrong unit conversions in IV-calculation items (mL/hr ↔ gtt/min ↔ mcg/kg/min)
Study tips
- 1Group drugs by class first: ACE inhibitors all end in -pril; beta blockers in -olol; PPIs in -prazole.
- 2Drill 10 IV calculation problems daily — units, drip rates, and titration are highly testable.
- 3For each high-priority drug, learn three things: mechanism, top side effect, top nursing teaching point.
- 4Memorize the "look-alike / sound-alike" pairs that ISMP publishes annually.
- 5NEET-UG is offered in Tamil (தமிழ்) at all TN centres. Many state-board students prefer Tamil-medium for biology questions but English-medium for physics and chemistry — you must choose one medium for the entire paper.
- 6For TN MBBS admission: register on TN Health website for the 7.5% government-school reservation if eligible — separate from MCC counselling.
- 7GATE Chennai and Coimbatore centres fill fastest; submit your GATE application within 72 hours of opening to secure your preferred centre.
Sample NCLEX-RN Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real NCLEX-RN questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
A nurse is administering furosemide 40 mg IV push. Which lab value would most concern the nurse before administration?
- ASodium 138 mEq/L
- BPotassium 2.9 mEq/LCorrect
- CBUN 18 mg/dL
- DGlucose 110 mg/dL
Why this answer?
Furosemide is a loop diuretic that causes potassium loss. A potassium of 2.9 (below normal range 3.5–5.0) signals hypokalemia. Administering further loop diuretic without electrolyte replacement risks dysrhythmia and digitalis toxicity if the patient is on digoxin.
- 2
Which client teaching is most important for a patient newly prescribed warfarin?
- ATake the medication with grapefruit juice
- BAvoid foods high in vitamin K
- CIncrease consumption of leafy green vegetables
- DAvoid all forms of NSAIDsCorrect
Why this answer?
Vitamin K should be kept consistent — not avoided — because warfarin's anticoagulant effect is dose-titrated against habitual vitamin K intake. NSAIDs, however, dramatically increase bleeding risk and must be strictly avoided.
Frequently asked questions
How many pharmacology questions appear on the NCLEX-RN?
Do I need to memorise generic and brand names?
What is the NCLEX-RN pass rate for Tamil candidates?
How long should Tamil candidates study Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies for the NCLEX-RN?
Practice NCLEX-RN questions free with Koydo.
NGN clinical-judgment items, pharmacology, and 6,000+ questions calibrated to the 2024 NCSBN test plan.
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- Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies for NCLEX-RN — U.S. candidatesSame Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies topic, different locale framing
- Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies for NCLEX-RN — U.K. candidatesSame Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies topic, different locale framing
- Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies for NCLEX-RN — Indian candidatesSame Pharmacological & Parenteral Therapies topic, different locale framing
Regulatory citation: NCSBN 2024 NCLEX-RN Test Plan — Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies.