Skip to content
Practice sessionVETERINARY EXAMSnavle

NAVLE (North American Veterinary Licensing Examination) Practice Exam 12

Practice exam for NAVLE (North American Veterinary Licensing Examination).

Active sessionNAVLE examNorth American Veterinary Licensing ExaminationNAVLE practice testveterinary licensing examICVA NAVLE+3
Question 1 of 1000%
Time remaining120:00
Attempts allowedUnlimited
Difficulty mixE • M • H
Back to exams

Question 1

MEDIUM

A 6-year-old neutered male Labrador Retriever is presented for acute onset abdominal distension and nonproductive retching after getting into the trash. On exam: hypersalivation, tachycardia (160/min), pale mucous membranes, prolonged CRT, and a tympanic cranial abdomen. Which immediate action is most appropriate while preparing for definitive treatment?

The presentation is classic for gastric dilatation-volvulus (GDV) with shock. Immediate priorities are cardiovascular stabilization (IV fluids) and rapid gastric decompression to improve venous return and ventilation. If an orogastric tube cannot be passed due to volvulus, percutaneous trocarization/needle decompression is indicated while preparing for surgery. Observation or oral meds are inappropriate; abdominocentesis is not the priority; proceeding to surgery without stabilization increases anesthetic risk.

Select one answer

Question 1 of 100

Community

Loading ranked answers and discussion...

Manage your cookie preferences

We use essential cookies to make Brainliest work. With your permission, we’d also like to use analytics and marketing cookies to improve your experience.