Pharmacology Mnemonics for Nursing Students (2026): Drug Classes, Memory Tricks & NCLEX Tips

March 21, 2026

Olivia Carter

Pharmacology Mnemonics for Nursing Students (2026): Drug Classes, Memory Tricks & NCLEX Tips
✅ Updated March 2026 — Reflects the April 1 NCLEX test plan update. See all 2026 NCLEX changes →

Pharmacology is one of the most challenging parts of nursing school and NCLEX prep. From drug classes to side effects to contraindications, there is a massive amount to keep straight. Pharmacology mnemonics turn complex drug information into short, memorable phrases you can recall under pressure — during clinicals, exams, and the NCLEX itself.

This cheat sheet covers the most tested drug classes with proven mnemonics, clinical pearls, and the lab values you need to monitor for each. Bookmark this page or print it for quick reference.

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Table of Contents


Why Pharmacology Mnemonics Work

Boost recall: Mnemonics use patterns, abbreviations, and visual cues to anchor complex drug information in your memory.

Reduce test anxiety: Quickly recalling key details frees up mental bandwidth for critical thinking on the NCLEX and in clinical settings.

Build confidence: When you know your drug facts cold, you feel more assured administering medications and answering exam questions.

Bridge to clinical practice: Mnemonics are not just for exams — nurses use mental shortcuts every day when checking orders, catching interactions, and educating patients.


Cardiovascular Drug Mnemonics

Beta-Blockers: “LOL Makes the Heart Rate Slow”

Example drugs: Metoprolol, Atenolol, Propranolol

All beta-blockers end in -olol. They decrease heart rate and blood pressure by blocking beta-adrenergic receptors. Hold if HR <60 bpm. Monitor for bradycardia, hypotension, and bronchospasm (avoid in asthma).

Lab to watch: Heart rate before each dose. See our Lab Values Cheat Sheet for cardiac marker reference ranges.

ACE Inhibitors: “-PRIL Puts the Pressure Down”

Example drugs: Enalapril, Lisinopril, Captopril

Pressure Reduced In Large vessels. They lower blood pressure by preventing angiotensin II formation. Watch for dry cough (most common reason patients discontinue), hyperkalemia, and angioedema.

Lab to watch: Potassium (K¹ 3.5–5.0 mEq/L) and creatinine. ACE inhibitors can raise potassium.

ARBs: “-SARTAN Saves the Arteries”

Example drugs: Losartan, Valsartan, Irbesartan

ARBs end in -sartan and work similarly to ACE inhibitors but without the dry cough. They block angiotensin II receptors directly. Same potassium and renal monitoring applies.

Calcium Channel Blockers: “Very Nice Drugs”

Verapamil, Nifedipine, Diltiazem

These drugs dilate blood vessels and slow the heart rate, reducing cardiac workload. Verapamil and diltiazem also treat arrhythmias. Avoid grapefruit juice (increases drug levels). For rhythm recognition, see the Heart Rhythm Strips Cheat Sheet.

Diuretics: “DIM the Fluid Volume”

Diuretics Increase Micturition (urination)

Loop diuretics (furosemide) are the strongest; thiazides (hydrochlorothiazide) are milder. Both deplete potassium — except potassium-sparing diuretics (spironolactone).

Remember: Furosemide = “Flush the Fluid Fast.” Monitor potassium, sodium, and I&Os.

Digoxin: “Dig Digs Into Toxicity”

Therapeutic range: 0.5–2.0 ng/mL. Signs of toxicity: Nausea, Vomiting, visual disturbances (yellow-green halos), bradycardia. Hold if HR <60 bpm (same as beta-blockers). Hypokalemia increases dig toxicity risk.


Anticoagulant and Coagulation Mnemonics

“Heparin Works FAST, Coumadin LASTS”

Heparin: Immediate effect, given IV or SubQ. Monitor aPTT (25–35 s normal; therapeutic range per protocol). Antidote: protamine sulfate.

Warfarin (Coumadin): Takes days to reach full effect. Monitor PT/INR (therapeutic INR usually 2.0–3.0). Antidote: vitamin K.

Lab pairing mnemonic: PT = Pill (warfarin is oral), aPTT = Parenteral (heparin is IV/SubQ). See the Lab Values Cheat Sheet for the full coagulation studies table.

DOACs: “No Lab, No Antidote (Mostly)”

Example drugs: Rivaroxaban (-xaban), Apixaban, Dabigatran

DOACs do not require routine lab monitoring like warfarin. Dabigatran has a specific reversal agent (idarucizumab). For factor Xa inhibitors, andexanet alfa is available.


Antibiotic Mnemonics

Penicillins and Cephalosporins: “Cross Allergy Alerts”

Penicillins end in -cillin (amoxicillin, ampicillin). Cephalosporins start with Ceph- or Cef- (cephalexin, ceftriaxone). Patients allergic to penicillins may cross-react with cephalosporins — always check allergy history.

Aminoglycosides: “A Mean Old Guy Destroys Kidneys and Ears”

Example drugs: Gentamicin, Tobramycin, Amikacin (end in -mycin or -micin)

Watch for nephrotoxicity (monitor BUN/creatinine) and ototoxicity (hearing loss, tinnitus). Check trough levels before the next dose.

Fluoroquinolones: “FLOX the Tendons”

Example drugs: Ciprofloxacin, Levofloxacin (end in -floxacin)

Black box warning for tendon rupture and tendinitis. Avoid in children and pregnant patients. Do not take with dairy or antacids (chelation reduces absorption).


Pain and CNS Drug Mnemonics

Opioid Side Effects: “MORPHINE CAN Control Pain”

Miosis (pupil constriction), Out of it (sedation), Respiratory depression, Pneumonia risk (aspiration from sedation), Hypotension, Infrequency (constipation, urinary retention), Nausea, Emesis

The number one priority: monitor respiratory rate. Hold if RR <12. Antidote: naloxone (Narcan).

Benzodiazepines: “-PAM at Bedtime”

Example drugs: Diazepam, Lorazepam, Midazolam

Used for anxiety, seizures, and procedural sedation. Watch for respiratory depression (especially combined with opioids). Antidote: flumazenil. Do not stop abruptly — taper to avoid seizures.

SSRIs: “SAFE for Depression”

Sertraline, flAvoxamine, Fluoxetine, Escitalopram (and citalopram, paroxetine)

First-line for depression. Takes 2–4 weeks for full effect. Watch for serotonin syndrome (agitation, hyperthermia, clonus) if combined with MAOIs or other serotonergic drugs. For more on psychiatric nursing, try the Mental Health NCLEX Practice Quiz.


Endocrine Drug Mnemonics

Insulin: “RN LIDS” (Onset Speed)

Rapid (lispro, aspart) → 15 min onset NPH (intermediate) → 1–2 hr onset Long-acting (glargine, detemir) → no peak, 24 hr duration

Never mix glargine (Lantus) — it is always given alone. NPH is the only insulin you can mix (draw Regular first: “Regular before NPH” = RN).

Lab to watch: Blood glucose (fasting 70–99 mg/dL). See our Lab Values Cheat Sheet for glucose ranges.

Thyroid Medications: “Hypo = Low and Slow”

Levothyroxine (Synthroid) treats hypothyroidism. Take on an empty stomach in the morning. Watch for signs of hyperthyroidism (tachycardia, weight loss, tremors) which indicate overdose.

Methimazole / PTU treat hyperthyroidism. Watch for agranulocytosis (sore throat, fever → check WBC).

Corticosteroids: “STEROIDS Make You CUSHION-oid”

Sodium/fluid retention, hyperglycemia, Thin skin/bruising, osteoEporosis, immune suppRession, mOOd changes, Infection risk, Do not stop abruptly (adrenal crisis), Sleep disturbance

Taper gradually. Monitor blood glucose and potassium.


Electrolyte and Fluid Mnemonics

Potassium: “The Heart Hates Bad K”

Both hypo- and hyperkalemia cause cardiac dysrhythmias. Low K (from diuretics, vomiting): flattened T waves, U waves. High K (from ACE inhibitors, renal failure): peaked T waves, wide QRS. Never push IV potassium — always dilute and infuse slowly.

Calcium and Magnesium: “Low Ca = Twitchy, Low Mg = Jerky”

Hypocalcemia: Trousseau sign, Chvostek sign, tetany. Hypomag: tremors, seizures, torsades de pointes. Always replace magnesium before calcium — mag is needed for calcium absorption.

For the full electrolyte reference table, see the Lab Values Cheat Sheet.


How to Use Mnemonics Effectively

Write them down: Repetition cements them in your memory, especially for visual learners. Create flashcards from this page.

Say them out loud: Vocalizing the mnemonic helps auditory learners encode the information.

Apply in practice: When reviewing medication charts or prepping for a test, recite the mnemonic and link it to a real patient scenario.

Teach others: Explaining a mnemonic to a classmate is one of the strongest ways to reinforce your own understanding.

Pair with practice questions: Mnemonics are a recall shortcut, but applying them to NCLEX-style scenarios is where the real learning happens. Try our free practice quizzes to test yourself.


NCLEX Practice Questions

Question 1. A nurse is administering IV heparin to a client with a pulmonary embolism. Which lab value should the nurse monitor to evaluate therapeutic effectiveness?

Show Answer
aPTT (activated partial thromboplastin time). Remember: aPTT = Parenteral (heparin). PT/INR is for warfarin (the Pill). The therapeutic aPTT range is protocol-specific, typically 1.5–2.5 times the normal value.

Question 2. A client taking lisinopril reports a persistent dry cough. The nurse understands this is caused by which mechanism?

Show Answer
Accumulation of bradykinin. ACE inhibitors prevent the breakdown of bradykinin, which irritates the airways and causes a dry cough. This is the most common reason patients switch from ACE inhibitors (-pril) to ARBs (-sartan), which do not cause cough.

Question 3. A nurse is preparing to administer morning insulins. The client takes both NPH and regular insulin. Which action is correct?

Show Answer
Draw up Regular insulin first, then NPH. Remember: RN = Regular before NPH. Regular insulin is clear; NPH is cloudy. Drawing Regular first prevents contamination of the Regular vial with NPH particles.

Want more pharm practice? Try the Cardiac Medications Quiz and Dosage Calculations Quiz.


Further Reading