StudyMaps

NCLEX Pharmacology Cheat Sheet: Drug Classes, Side Effects & Nursing Actions

May 26, 2026 StudyMaps Team

Pharmacology questions make up 12-18% of the NCLEX-RN exam. With hundreds of drugs to know, most candidates waste time memorizing individual names instead of learning the patterns that actually get tested.

The Next Generation NCLEX doesn't ask you to recite drug names. It tests whether you can apply pharmacology knowledge in clinical scenarios — identifying adverse effects, choosing the right nursing action, and catching drug interactions during unfolding case studies.

This cheat sheet organizes the highest-yield drug families by mechanism, so you can study smarter and answer faster.

What Belongs on a Pharmacology Cheat Sheet for NCLEX

A useful NCLEX pharmacology reference groups drugs by class, not by chapter. For each class, you need:

  • Prototype drug (the one the exam uses most)
  • Mechanism of action (one sentence)
  • Key side effects (the ones that show up in NCLEX questions)
  • Priority nursing action (what you assess first)
  • Antidote or reversal (if one exists)
  • This structure matches how the NCLEX tests pharmacology: scenario → identify the drug class → pick the right nursing response.

    Highest-Yield Drug Families to Memorize First

    These drug classes appear most frequently on the NCLEX-RN:

    Cardiac Medications

  • ACE inhibitors (-pril): dry cough, hyperkalemia, angioedema. Monitor potassium.
  • Beta blockers (-olol): bradycardia, hypotension, bronchospasm. Hold if HR < 60.
  • Calcium channel blockers (-dipine): peripheral edema, constipation. Monitor BP.
  • Anticoagulants: Warfarin (INR 2-3, antidote: vitamin K), Heparin (aPTT, antidote: protamine sulfate)
  • Digoxin: toxicity signs (nausea, visual changes, bradycardia). Therapeutic level 0.5-2.0 ng/mL.
  • Electrolyte and Fluid Management

  • Loop diuretics (furosemide): hypokalemia, ototoxicity. Monitor K+ and hearing.
  • Potassium-sparing diuretics (spironolactone): hyperkalemia. Avoid K+ supplements.
  • IV potassium: never push IV, always dilute, monitor cardiac rhythm.
  • CNS and Pain

  • Opioids (morphine, fentanyl): respiratory depression (antidote: naloxone). Assess RR before admin.
  • Benzodiazepines (lorazepam, diazepam): CNS depression, respiratory depression (antidote: flumazenil).
  • SSRIs (sertraline, fluoxetine): serotonin syndrome risk. Takes 2-4 weeks for therapeutic effect.
  • Endocrine

  • Insulin: onset/peak/duration patterns. Rapid-acting peaks in 1 hour; NPH peaks at 4-12 hours. Hypoglycemia signs.
  • Thyroid hormones (levothyroxine): take on empty stomach. Signs of toxicity mimic hyperthyroidism.
  • Corticosteroids (prednisone): hyperglycemia, immunosuppression, cushingoid features. Never stop abruptly.
  • Anti-infectives

  • Aminoglycosides (gentamicin): nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity. Monitor trough levels, BUN/creatinine.
  • Vancomycin: red man syndrome (infuse slowly). Monitor trough levels.
  • Fluoroquinolones (-floxacin): tendon rupture risk. Avoid in pregnancy.
  • Side-Effect and Antidote Patterns NCLEX Keeps Testing

    The exam loves antidote questions. Memorize these pairs:

    Drug Antidote
    WarfarinVitamin K
    HeparinProtamine sulfate
    OpioidsNaloxone (Narcan)
    BenzodiazepinesFlumazenil
    DigoxinDigibind
    AcetaminophenAcetylcysteine (Mucomyst)
    Magnesium sulfateCalcium gluconate

    The exam also tests side-effect patterns:

  • -olol → bradycardia → hold if HR < 60
  • -pril → dry cough → switch to ARB (-sartan) if intolerable
  • -statin → myopathy → report muscle pain
  • -pam/-lam → CNS depression → fall precautions
  • How to Study Pharmacology for NGN-Style Questions

    The Next Gen NCLEX tests pharmacology through clinical scenarios, not drug name recall. Study strategy:

    1. Learn by class, not by name. If you know ACE inhibitors, you can answer questions about any -pril drug.

    2. Focus on nursing actions. The exam asks what you do, not what the drug does biochemically.

    3. Use visual maps. A one-page map showing drug class → mechanism → side effects → nursing action → antidote lets you see the whole pattern at once.

    4. Practice with case studies. NGN pharmacology questions embed drugs inside patient scenarios. Practice identifying which drug class is relevant before looking at the options.

    Get the Free NCLEX Pharmacology Sample Map

    Our NCLEX-RN visual study maps include dedicated pharmacology maps that organize drug classes visually — mechanism on one side, nursing actions on the other.

    → Get your free NCLEX-RN sample map

    Looking for the complete NCLEX prep guide? Read our NCLEX-RN Study Guide PDF 2026 for the full exam breakdown and study strategy.

    20 visual study maps covering pharmacology, med-surg, maternity, mental health, and every high-yield NCLEX topic. See all NCLEX-RN study maps →

    View pricing →

    Get a Free Sample Map

    Try a study map from this exam before you buy the full bundle.

    Download Free Sample