Deck 2: Drug-Taking Behaviour: Personal and Social Issues

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Question
Polydrug use refers to the use of a drug at different dosage levels from administration to administration.
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Question
Illegal drugs cause the largest number of deaths per year.
Question
In British Columbia in 2008, men outnumbered women two-to-one in terms of deaths due to illicit drugs.
Question
If an LD100 dose were to be given to a group of 50 mice, all of them would die.
Question
Cocaine has been used as a local anaesthetic in Canada.
Question
According to DAWN statistics, it is far more common for drug-related deaths to be a result of monodrug rather than a result of polydrug use.
Question
All substances have the potential for toxicity.
Question
The DAWN reporting program includes all emergency department patients in the United States.
Question
Water has the potential for being a psychoactive substance.
Question
The Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse (CCSA) routinely gathers data concerning drug-related medical emergencies in Canada, but these data are not as extensive as the DAWN statistics in the United States.
Question
Injecting heroin followed by snorting heroin is an example of polydrug use.
Question
Examining the properties of a drug's effect is the same as examining the properties of the drug itself.
Question
The margin of safety measure of a particular drug is a more conservative (in the direction of safety) measure of drug toxicity than the therapeutic index for that drug.
Question
If a drug is ED50, it means the drug will become toxic if 50 mg of the drug is taken.
Question
A patient mentions drinking eight glasses of vodka and gin during a drug-related ED visit. This is an example of an alcohol-in-combination DAWN case.
Question
Each effect produced by a particular drug will have its own dose-response curves.
Question
The higher the margin of safety ratio, the more toxic the drug.
Question
A problem with street drugs is that the user doesn't know the toxicity risks until the drug has been used.
Question
Multiple substance use is another name for polydrug use.
Question
The question of drug safety depends on whether a drug can be toxic at low doses.
Question
The concept of physical dependence originates from observations of heroin abusers.
Question
In most cases, the dosage levels taken by drug abusers would be lethal if taken by a first-time user.
Question
Withdrawal symptoms involve symptoms generally opposite to the original effect of the drug.
Question
A dirty needle carries the risk of HIV infection but not of hepatitis infection.
Question
Tolerance is maximized when the user always takes the drug in the same setting.
Question
According to recent DAWN statistics, there has been a greater number of drug-related ED visits for prescription of OTC medications than of illicit drugs alone. Narcotic analgesics are on the rise.
Question
If an individual experiences drug tolerance, an increasing dose must be taken over time in order to maintain the same level of drug effect.
Question
Drug tolerance is to setting as behavioural tolerance is to repetition.
Question
Most addicts completing the withdrawal process in its entirety do not become re-addicted.
Question
In an experiment discussed in the text, laboratory animals would choose cocaine over food even if the animal was starving to death.
Question
Continuing drug-taking behaviour in order to avoid withdrawal is one indication of physical dependence.
Question
Drug abusers take drug doses, which are well beyond the LD-response curve amounts.
Question
There are more fatalities from chronic smoking of tobacco than from illicit drug use.
Question
Behavioural tolerance is based on Pavlovian conditioning.
Question
The existence of physical dependence in a particular drug hinges upon the presence of physical withdrawal symptoms should the individual stop taking the drug.
Question
The greater the extent of drug-taking behaviour during pregnancy, the more likely there will be adverse consequences during labour and delivery.
Question
Withdrawal symptoms are approximately the same for every psychoactive drug.
Question
Someone cannot be both physically and psychologically dependent on a drug.
Question
DAWN statistics show that many emergencies involve drugs being taken in combination with alcohol.
Question
The placental barrier protects a fetus from toxic substances in the mother.
Question
Canada uses five "schedules" to classify controlled substances.
Question
Cocaine is an example of a Schedule I drug.
Question
There is a statistical association between the use of illicit drugs and crime.
Question
Currently in Canada, a contract, called a drug licence, is required to fabricate, package, label, distribute, import, wholesale, or test a drug.
Question
Needle-exchange programs increase the prevalence of illicit drug use.
Question
Tendencies toward violence have been observed during times of crack withdrawal as well as crack intoxication.
Question
The Opium Act was the first North American law that made opiates illegal.
Question
The smoking of opium was opposed at least in part because of its association with Chinese immigrants.
Question
Under a laissez-faire philosophy, the government would assert little or no regulatory control with respect to drugs.
Question
In Canada, different amounts of cannabis and cannabis products are classified by different "schedules."
Question
All psychoactive drugs have the same adverse effects on the fetus.
Question
Violence resulting directly from the physiological effects of an injected drug is referred to as systemic violence.
Question
Systemic violence might include robbing a shopkeeper in order to get money to buy drugs.
Question
The DSM-5 includes three diagnosis categories for substance-related disorders.
Question
Fetal effects of methamphetamine are unknown but likely to be similar to the effects of cocaine-reducing normal fetal blood flow.
Question
The high price of illicit drugs on the street contributes to the incidence of economically compulsive violence.
Question
Drug-taking behaviour was not viewed negatively in Canada until the Food and Drug Regulations Act came into effect in 1947.
Question
Prescription drugs have little effect on pregnant woman and the newborn.
Question
The current legislation that controls the possession, production, selling, or importation of drugs is the Narcotic Control Act.
Question
Needle-exchange programs are available in all Canadian cities.
Question
According to the text, which of the following account(s) for about 80% of the social cost of substance abuse?

A) Alcohol
B) Tobacco
C) Illicit drugs
D) Both A and B
Question
According to the text, each year in Canada, it is estimated that there is a social cost of approximately ________________ due to substance abuse.

A) $9 billion
B) $19 billion
C) $29 billion
D) $39 billion
Question
An effective dose (ED) of a drug depends upon __________.

A) what drug effect is being observed
B) what percentage of the test population you have specified
C) both A and B
D) neither A nor B
Question
The therapeutic index is a way of comparing __________.

A) the LD50 against the LD1
B) the LD1 against the ED99
C) the ED99 against the ED50
D) the LD50 against the ED50
Question
The LD-response curve for a particular drug will always be positioned ________ with respect to the ED-response curve.

A) on top
B) farther to the left
C) farther to the right
D) at the bottom
Question
A dose-response curve is generally shaped as a(n) __________.

A) S
B) U
C) inverted U
D) inverted V
Question
Pablo Escobar created the first modern-day cocaine trafficking alliance.
Question
A drug slowing the rate of respiration to dangerously low levels immediately following its administration is an example of __________.

A) acute toxicity
B) collateral toxicity
C) conditional toxicity
D) chronic toxicity
Question
Movies produced and released in the 1930s contributed to marijuana being made illegal.
Question
When reporting the ED50 of a drug, the "50" refers to __________.

A) 50 milligrams of the drug
B) 50% of the test population
C) volunteers that are 50 years of age or older
D) 50% of the maximal dose that is possible to administer
Question
________ is defined as the possibility that the short-term effects of a particular drug will trigger a toxic reaction.

A) Acute toxicity
B) Collateral toxicity
C) Conditional toxicity
D) Chronic toxicity
Question
The toxic dose is a measure that is commonly calculated in __________.

A) animal studies
B) children under 6 years of age
C) clinical trials with humans
D) people taking other medications
Question
An analogue is a substance with a different chemical structure, but same effects, as another drug.
Question
The ratio of the LD50 over the ED50 is called the __________.

A) therapeutic index
B) margin of safety
C) effective dose for a particular drug effect
D) lethal dose
Question
Analogy: The ED-response curve is to the LD-response curve as __________.

A) effective is to lethal
B) emotional is to linguistic
C) early is to late
D) illicit is to licit
Question
An extreme case of intoxication can involve which of the following nondrug substances?

A) Broccoli
B) Chocolate
C) Water
D) Sushi
Question
As dose level rises, it is likely that the effect produced by the drug __________.

A) rises as well
B) rises and then falls
C) falls and then rises
D) remains the same
Question
If a drug is dangerous, poisonous, or in some way interferes with a person's normal functioning, that drug is said to be __________.

A) toxic
B) addictive
C) illicit
D) acute
Question
With regard to the social cost of substance abuse in Canada, alcohol and tobacco account for about __________ of the cost and illegal drugs account for about __________.

A) 30%; 70%
B) 80%; 20%
C) 60%; 40%
D) 50%; 50%
Question
An S-shaped graph (dose-response curve) helps explain __________.

A) drug addiction
B) drug elasticity
C) drug toxicity
D) none of the above
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Deck 2: Drug-Taking Behaviour: Personal and Social Issues
1
Polydrug use refers to the use of a drug at different dosage levels from administration to administration.
False
2
Illegal drugs cause the largest number of deaths per year.
False
3
In British Columbia in 2008, men outnumbered women two-to-one in terms of deaths due to illicit drugs.
True
4
If an LD100 dose were to be given to a group of 50 mice, all of them would die.
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5
Cocaine has been used as a local anaesthetic in Canada.
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6
According to DAWN statistics, it is far more common for drug-related deaths to be a result of monodrug rather than a result of polydrug use.
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7
All substances have the potential for toxicity.
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8
The DAWN reporting program includes all emergency department patients in the United States.
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9
Water has the potential for being a psychoactive substance.
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10
The Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse (CCSA) routinely gathers data concerning drug-related medical emergencies in Canada, but these data are not as extensive as the DAWN statistics in the United States.
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11
Injecting heroin followed by snorting heroin is an example of polydrug use.
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12
Examining the properties of a drug's effect is the same as examining the properties of the drug itself.
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13
The margin of safety measure of a particular drug is a more conservative (in the direction of safety) measure of drug toxicity than the therapeutic index for that drug.
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14
If a drug is ED50, it means the drug will become toxic if 50 mg of the drug is taken.
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15
A patient mentions drinking eight glasses of vodka and gin during a drug-related ED visit. This is an example of an alcohol-in-combination DAWN case.
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16
Each effect produced by a particular drug will have its own dose-response curves.
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17
The higher the margin of safety ratio, the more toxic the drug.
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18
A problem with street drugs is that the user doesn't know the toxicity risks until the drug has been used.
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19
Multiple substance use is another name for polydrug use.
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20
The question of drug safety depends on whether a drug can be toxic at low doses.
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21
The concept of physical dependence originates from observations of heroin abusers.
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22
In most cases, the dosage levels taken by drug abusers would be lethal if taken by a first-time user.
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23
Withdrawal symptoms involve symptoms generally opposite to the original effect of the drug.
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24
A dirty needle carries the risk of HIV infection but not of hepatitis infection.
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25
Tolerance is maximized when the user always takes the drug in the same setting.
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26
According to recent DAWN statistics, there has been a greater number of drug-related ED visits for prescription of OTC medications than of illicit drugs alone. Narcotic analgesics are on the rise.
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k this deck
27
If an individual experiences drug tolerance, an increasing dose must be taken over time in order to maintain the same level of drug effect.
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28
Drug tolerance is to setting as behavioural tolerance is to repetition.
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29
Most addicts completing the withdrawal process in its entirety do not become re-addicted.
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30
In an experiment discussed in the text, laboratory animals would choose cocaine over food even if the animal was starving to death.
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31
Continuing drug-taking behaviour in order to avoid withdrawal is one indication of physical dependence.
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32
Drug abusers take drug doses, which are well beyond the LD-response curve amounts.
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33
There are more fatalities from chronic smoking of tobacco than from illicit drug use.
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34
Behavioural tolerance is based on Pavlovian conditioning.
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35
The existence of physical dependence in a particular drug hinges upon the presence of physical withdrawal symptoms should the individual stop taking the drug.
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36
The greater the extent of drug-taking behaviour during pregnancy, the more likely there will be adverse consequences during labour and delivery.
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37
Withdrawal symptoms are approximately the same for every psychoactive drug.
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38
Someone cannot be both physically and psychologically dependent on a drug.
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39
DAWN statistics show that many emergencies involve drugs being taken in combination with alcohol.
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40
The placental barrier protects a fetus from toxic substances in the mother.
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41
Canada uses five "schedules" to classify controlled substances.
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k this deck
42
Cocaine is an example of a Schedule I drug.
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43
There is a statistical association between the use of illicit drugs and crime.
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44
Currently in Canada, a contract, called a drug licence, is required to fabricate, package, label, distribute, import, wholesale, or test a drug.
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45
Needle-exchange programs increase the prevalence of illicit drug use.
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k this deck
46
Tendencies toward violence have been observed during times of crack withdrawal as well as crack intoxication.
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k this deck
47
The Opium Act was the first North American law that made opiates illegal.
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k this deck
48
The smoking of opium was opposed at least in part because of its association with Chinese immigrants.
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k this deck
49
Under a laissez-faire philosophy, the government would assert little or no regulatory control with respect to drugs.
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k this deck
50
In Canada, different amounts of cannabis and cannabis products are classified by different "schedules."
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k this deck
51
All psychoactive drugs have the same adverse effects on the fetus.
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52
Violence resulting directly from the physiological effects of an injected drug is referred to as systemic violence.
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53
Systemic violence might include robbing a shopkeeper in order to get money to buy drugs.
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54
The DSM-5 includes three diagnosis categories for substance-related disorders.
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55
Fetal effects of methamphetamine are unknown but likely to be similar to the effects of cocaine-reducing normal fetal blood flow.
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k this deck
56
The high price of illicit drugs on the street contributes to the incidence of economically compulsive violence.
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k this deck
57
Drug-taking behaviour was not viewed negatively in Canada until the Food and Drug Regulations Act came into effect in 1947.
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k this deck
58
Prescription drugs have little effect on pregnant woman and the newborn.
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k this deck
59
The current legislation that controls the possession, production, selling, or importation of drugs is the Narcotic Control Act.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
Needle-exchange programs are available in all Canadian cities.
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k this deck
61
According to the text, which of the following account(s) for about 80% of the social cost of substance abuse?

A) Alcohol
B) Tobacco
C) Illicit drugs
D) Both A and B
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Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
According to the text, each year in Canada, it is estimated that there is a social cost of approximately ________________ due to substance abuse.

A) $9 billion
B) $19 billion
C) $29 billion
D) $39 billion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
An effective dose (ED) of a drug depends upon __________.

A) what drug effect is being observed
B) what percentage of the test population you have specified
C) both A and B
D) neither A nor B
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Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
The therapeutic index is a way of comparing __________.

A) the LD50 against the LD1
B) the LD1 against the ED99
C) the ED99 against the ED50
D) the LD50 against the ED50
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Unlock Deck
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65
The LD-response curve for a particular drug will always be positioned ________ with respect to the ED-response curve.

A) on top
B) farther to the left
C) farther to the right
D) at the bottom
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Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
A dose-response curve is generally shaped as a(n) __________.

A) S
B) U
C) inverted U
D) inverted V
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Pablo Escobar created the first modern-day cocaine trafficking alliance.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
A drug slowing the rate of respiration to dangerously low levels immediately following its administration is an example of __________.

A) acute toxicity
B) collateral toxicity
C) conditional toxicity
D) chronic toxicity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Movies produced and released in the 1930s contributed to marijuana being made illegal.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
When reporting the ED50 of a drug, the "50" refers to __________.

A) 50 milligrams of the drug
B) 50% of the test population
C) volunteers that are 50 years of age or older
D) 50% of the maximal dose that is possible to administer
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
________ is defined as the possibility that the short-term effects of a particular drug will trigger a toxic reaction.

A) Acute toxicity
B) Collateral toxicity
C) Conditional toxicity
D) Chronic toxicity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
The toxic dose is a measure that is commonly calculated in __________.

A) animal studies
B) children under 6 years of age
C) clinical trials with humans
D) people taking other medications
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
An analogue is a substance with a different chemical structure, but same effects, as another drug.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
The ratio of the LD50 over the ED50 is called the __________.

A) therapeutic index
B) margin of safety
C) effective dose for a particular drug effect
D) lethal dose
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
Analogy: The ED-response curve is to the LD-response curve as __________.

A) effective is to lethal
B) emotional is to linguistic
C) early is to late
D) illicit is to licit
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
An extreme case of intoxication can involve which of the following nondrug substances?

A) Broccoli
B) Chocolate
C) Water
D) Sushi
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
As dose level rises, it is likely that the effect produced by the drug __________.

A) rises as well
B) rises and then falls
C) falls and then rises
D) remains the same
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
If a drug is dangerous, poisonous, or in some way interferes with a person's normal functioning, that drug is said to be __________.

A) toxic
B) addictive
C) illicit
D) acute
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Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
With regard to the social cost of substance abuse in Canada, alcohol and tobacco account for about __________ of the cost and illegal drugs account for about __________.

A) 30%; 70%
B) 80%; 20%
C) 60%; 40%
D) 50%; 50%
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
An S-shaped graph (dose-response curve) helps explain __________.

A) drug addiction
B) drug elasticity
C) drug toxicity
D) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
locked card icon
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 217 flashcards in this deck.