Screening models for local anaesthetics MCQs With Answer

Introduction: Screening models for local anaesthetics are essential in B. Pharm training to evaluate potency, onset, duration, toxicity and mechanism of action. Common keywords include in vitro nerve preparations, patch‑clamp, Langendorff heart, IC50/EC50, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, structure‑activity relationship (SAR), ester versus amide metabolism, lipophilicity and cardiotoxicity. These models range from isolated nerve or tissue assays and molecular ion‑channel screens to in vivo analgesia and toxicity tests, enabling formulation and safety optimization. Understanding model selection, endpoints and limitations helps predict clinical behavior and guide drug design. Now let’s test your knowledge with 30 MCQs on this topic.

Q1. Which in vitro preparation is classically used to assess nerve conduction block by local anaesthetics?

  • Isolated frog sciatic nerve
  • Isolated guinea pig atrium
  • Rat liver microsomes
  • Isolated rabbit kidney

Correct Answer: Isolated frog sciatic nerve

Q2. Which assay directly measures sodium channel blockade by local anaesthetics at the molecular level?

  • Patch‑clamp electrophysiology
  • Tail‑flick test
  • Langendorff heart perfusion
  • Hot‑plate test

Correct Answer: Patch‑clamp electrophysiology

Q3. The Langendorff perfused heart model is primarily used to evaluate which adverse effect of local anaesthetics?

  • Cardiotoxicity and arrhythmogenic potential
  • Hepatotoxicity
  • Renal clearance
  • Local tissue irritation

Correct Answer: Cardiotoxicity and arrhythmogenic potential

Q4. In screening local anaesthetics, EC50 or IC50 values indicate what property?

  • Potency of effect (concentration for half‑maximal response)
  • Maximum efficacy achievable
  • Rate of metabolism
  • Toxic dose in humans

Correct Answer: Potency of effect (concentration for half‑maximal response)

Q5. Which physicochemical parameter most strongly affects onset of action of local anaesthetics?

  • pKa relative to tissue pH
  • Molecular weight only
  • Color of the solution
  • Melting point

Correct Answer: pKa relative to tissue pH

Q6. Ester local anaesthetics are primarily metabolized by which pathway?

  • Plasma pseudocholinesterases (esterases)
  • CYP450 hepatic oxidation
  • Glomerular filtration unchanged
  • Conjugation with glutathione

Correct Answer: Plasma pseudocholinesterases (esterases)

Q7. Which in vivo assay measures sensory blockade and is commonly used to screen analgesic potency of local anaesthetics?

  • Tail‑flick latency test
  • Rotarod performance test
  • Forced swim test
  • Open field locomotion

Correct Answer: Tail‑flick latency test

Q8. Lipophilicity of a local anaesthetic influences which clinical property most directly?

  • Duration of action due to tissue binding
  • pKa value
  • Color of the drug
  • Route of renal excretion

Correct Answer: Duration of action due to tissue binding

Q9. Which parameter is used to compare safety margin between nerve block and systemic toxicity in screening?

  • Therapeutic index (safety index)
  • Log P only
  • Onset time measured in seconds
  • Protein binding percentage alone

Correct Answer: Therapeutic index (safety index)

Q10. High‑throughput screening for local anaesthetics often uses which surrogate endpoint?

  • Block of sodium currents in automated patch‑clamp assays
  • Tail diameter measurement
  • Animal body weight change
  • Colorimetric pH shift

Correct Answer: Block of sodium currents in automated patch‑clamp assays

Q11. Which structural change typically increases potency of an amide local anaesthetic?

  • Increased lipophilicity of the aromatic moiety
  • Shortening the alkyl chain to reduce size
  • Replacing amide with ester bond
  • Removing tertiary amine

Correct Answer: Increased lipophilicity of the aromatic moiety

Q12. A lower pH at the injection site (e.g., inflamed tissue) affects local anaesthetic how?

  • Reduces fraction of non‑ionized drug and slows onset
  • Increases non‑ionized fraction and speeds onset
  • No effect on onset or potency
  • Causes immediate systemic toxicity

Correct Answer: Reduces fraction of non‑ionized drug and slows onset

Q13. Which animal preparation is useful to study differential block of motor versus sensory fibers?

  • Isolated peripheral nerve with compound action potential recording
  • Isolated kidney slice
  • Hepatocyte culture
  • Isolated pancreatic islet

Correct Answer: Isolated peripheral nerve with compound action potential recording

Q14. Stereoisomerism in local anaesthetics can influence which attributes?

  • Potency, toxicity and metabolic profile
  • Only the color of the drug
  • Only the pKa value
  • None; stereoisomers are identical in effect

Correct Answer: Potency, toxicity and metabolic profile

Q15. Which method assesses cardiotoxicity by measuring contractile force and conduction in an isolated heart?

  • Langendorff perfusion model
  • Pooled plasma protein assay
  • Whole blood clotting time
  • Isolated lymphocyte proliferation

Correct Answer: Langendorff perfusion model

Q16. In vitro assays often evaluate reversibility of block. Why is reversibility important?

  • Predicts potential for prolonged motor/sensory deficits and safety
  • Indicates color stability of the formulation
  • Determines the taste of the drug
  • Shows whether drug is fluorescent

Correct Answer: Predicts potential for prolonged motor/sensory deficits and safety

Q17. Adding epinephrine to a local anaesthetic formulation is screened for what effect?

  • Prolongation of local effect via vasoconstriction
  • Accelerated hepatic metabolism
  • Increased renal excretion rate
  • Neutralization of drug pKa

Correct Answer: Prolongation of local effect via vasoconstriction

Q18. QSAR and molecular modelling in screening primarily help with what?

  • Predicting structure‑activity relationships and guiding design
  • Measuring in vivo analgesic duration directly
  • Replacing all animal toxicity studies
  • Providing definitive clinical dosing

Correct Answer: Predicting structure‑activity relationships and guiding design

Q19. Which toxic effect is commonly monitored in animal models at high systemic concentrations of local anaesthetics?

  • Central nervous system excitation followed by depression
  • Hyperglycemia only
  • Increased hair growth
  • Enhanced renal filtration

Correct Answer: Central nervous system excitation followed by depression

Q20. When measuring onset of block in isolated nerve preparations, what is a typical measurable endpoint?

  • Time to 50% reduction in compound action potential amplitude
  • Time to color change of solution
  • pH shift in perfusate
  • Change in tissue weight

Correct Answer: Time to 50% reduction in compound action potential amplitude

Q21. Which ion channel subtype is a primary molecular target for most local anaesthetics?

  • Voltage‑gated sodium channels (Nav)
  • Ligand‑gated nicotinic receptors
  • Potassium leak channels only
  • Chloride channels exclusively

Correct Answer: Voltage‑gated sodium channels (Nav)

Q22. In tissue binding studies, high protein binding of a local anaesthetic typically causes:

  • Longer duration of action due to depot effect
  • Faster renal elimination
  • Decreased potency at the target site
  • Immediate hypersensitivity reactions always

Correct Answer: Longer duration of action due to depot effect

Q23. Which experimental control is essential when comparing two local anaesthetic formulations in vitro?

  • Vehicle (placebo) control with identical solvent conditions
  • Using different temperatures for each group
  • Changing pH only in the test group
  • Varying tissue source randomly without record

Correct Answer: Vehicle (placebo) control with identical solvent conditions

Q24. The tail‑flick and hot‑plate tests primarily measure which modality of nociception?

  • Thermal nociception
  • Mechanical nociception
  • Inflammatory edema
  • Auditory reflexes

Correct Answer: Thermal nociception

Q25. Which factor is least relevant when selecting an animal model for local anaesthetic screening?

  • Color of the animal’s fur
  • Similarity of nerve anatomy to humans
  • Ethical and regulatory considerations
  • Reproducibility of endpoints

Correct Answer: Color of the animal’s fur

Q26. In vitro models using artificial lipid membranes help to study which property of local anaesthetics?

  • Membrane partitioning and lipid interactions
  • Renal clearance mechanisms
  • Hepatic enzyme induction
  • Behavioral side effects

Correct Answer: Membrane partitioning and lipid interactions

Q27. Which screening outcome would indicate a candidate has undesirably high systemic potency relative to local effect?

  • Low therapeutic index with systemic toxicity at near‑effective concentrations
  • Very high pKa only
  • Poor solubility in water only
  • Slow onset exclusively

Correct Answer: Low therapeutic index with systemic toxicity at near‑effective concentrations

Q28. Why are metabolic stability assays important in screening local anaesthetics?

  • They predict duration, systemic exposure and risk of accumulation
  • They change the color of the final product
  • They determine the taste of oral formulations
  • They are unnecessary for injectable drugs

Correct Answer: They predict duration, systemic exposure and risk of accumulation

Q29. Which result from a nerve conduction velocity study would suggest preferential block of small pain fibers?

  • Greater reduction in conduction of thin, small‑diameter fibers than large fibers
  • Equal reduction across all fiber types
  • Faster conduction in small fibers
  • No change in any fiber conduction

Correct Answer: Greater reduction in conduction of thin, small‑diameter fibers than large fibers

Q30. Ethical considerations in screening models require which action before animal studies?

  • Approval from an institutional animal ethics committee and adherence to 3Rs
  • Immediate publication without approval
  • Random selection of endpoints without justification
  • Use of highest possible dose to save time

Correct Answer: Approval from an institutional animal ethics committee and adherence to 3Rs

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