RxExam is more than a NAPLEX question bank. It is a study system built to help students practice clinically, learn deeply, and retain more from every question.
The current NAPLEX content outline places major weight on Person-Centered Assessment and Treatment Planning. Students need more than memorization. They need repeated exposure to patient-focused clinical questions and explanations that reinforce how drugs are used in practice.
RxExam is designed for that kind of preparation with thousands of scenario-based questions and dedicated patient-profile practice.
Many question banks tell students which option is correct and move on. RxExam goes further. Our explanations are written like mini drug reviews that help students understand the medication behind the question.
That means every question becomes a chance to review high-yield details, not just score performance.
Our goal is not simply to tell students the right answer. Our goal is to help them remember the drug when it appears again in a different question, a patient case, or a more difficult clinical scenario.
The example below shows how an RxExam question teaches more than the correct choice. It also highlights a classic NAPLEX trap that students may miss if they are only doing surface-level review.
Edarbi (azilsartan medoxomil) is a prodrug that is hydrolyzed in the gastrointestinal tract during absorption to form azilsartan. Azilsartan is an angiotensin II receptor blocker (ARB) that selectively blocks the AT1 receptor subtype.

Edarbi is indicated for the treatment of hypertension to lower blood pressure. The recommended adult dose is 80 mg orally once daily. A starting dose of 40 mg once daily may be considered in patients receiving high doses of diuretics. It may be taken with or without food.


Another key point is that renal dose adjustment is not required in patients with mild-to-severe renal impairment or even end-stage renal disease.
Common adverse effects associated with Edarbi include hypotension, diarrhea, nausea, dizziness, and muscle spasm.

Students get more from RxExam because every explanation is designed to build retention, not just provide a score. When the same drug appears later in a patient case or another question format, students are better prepared because they have already reviewed the most important facts in context.
A short rationale that confirms the correct answer but leaves out many of the facts students still need to know.
A deeper explanation that reinforces the clinical details, trap points, and review material that help students perform better on future questions.
RxExam combines clinically focused practice with detailed answer explanations that act like mini drug reviews. Each explanation can reinforce mechanism of action, indication, dosing, renal adjustment, adverse effects, storage and dispensing requirements, and common NAPLEX trap points.
RxExam is designed to support clinical preparation through scenario-based questions, patient-profile practice, and explanations that teach students how to apply drug knowledge in patient-centered situations.
The Edarbi sample shows how one RxExam question can teach much more than the correct answer by reinforcing drug class, indication, dosing, renal dosing, adverse effects, and a classic dispensing trap: Edarbi should not be repackaged and should remain in its original container.
RxExam combines clinical practice, detailed explanations, and high-yield reinforcement so students learn more from every question and prepare with greater confidence.
Explore RxExam NAPLEXPharmacyExam helps pharmacy graduates prepare for the NAPLEX and MPJE licensure examinations using exam-style practice questions and clinical pharmacy simulations.