Every drug class a nurse needs, organized by body system.
A calm, scannable reference for the pharmacology you're accountable for in clinical practice — and on the NCLEX.
Body systems
15 systems · 89 classesCardiovascular
Beta-blockers, ACE inhibitors, statins, anticoagulants…
Renal
Loop, thiazide, and potassium-sparing diuretics…
Nervous
Opioids, benzodiazepines, SSRIs, anticonvulsants…
Respiratory
Bronchodilators, inhaled corticosteroids, antihistamines…
Digestive / GI
Proton pump inhibitors, antiemetics, H2 antagonists, laxatives…
Endocrine
Insulins, oral antidiabetics, thyroid agents, corticosteroids…
Reproductive & OB
Magnesium sulfate, oxytocin, hormonal contraceptives — labor drugs & the estrogen–VTE story…
Musculoskeletal
NSAIDs, skeletal muscle relaxants, bisphosphonates…
Immune / Anti-infective
Penicillins, cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones, antivirals…
Integumentary
Topical corticosteroids, topical antifungals, wound & burn agents…
Sensory / Ophthalmic
Glaucoma & eye medications — lowering intraocular pressure to save the optic nerve…
Hematologic
Iron, B12/folate, ESAs, colony-stimulating factors…
Autonomic
Cholinergics & anticholinergics — bethanechol, atropine, oxybutynin…
Oncology
Chemotherapy principles — hazardous handling, myelosuppression & nadir, extravasation, tumor lysis…
Herbal & Supplements
Herbal/supplement interactions — St. John’s wort CYP3A4 induction, bleeding-risk herbs…
Quick reference
Whole-course study tables, pulled from every drug class.
One drug to learn per class — 75 prototypes.
The reversal agent for every class that has one — 15 to know.
Therapeutic levels vs. normal ranges — 47 monitored values.
ISMP classes to double-check — 11 of them.
Findings that need urgent action — 88 triage flags.