I had a family using "Revolution" on their pup. They had used it for two months and both times, within a day or two of application he would have a petit mal seizure that would last seconds and then nothing the rest of the month.
They live in an agricultural area so I had a gut feeling it could be environmental/chemical related so we went thru a long discussion of what was going on when each seizure occured. We hit on the relationship between the application of the Revolution and the seizure. Once they stopped using the Revolution, there has never been another seizure.
I would agree with "So Sorry" and the comments about the low blood sugar, taking care to keep you girl safe but before you jump off a bridge of no return, put your thinking cap on and be sure there isn't something else going on that may factor in here.
It is believed, in inherited epilepsy, both parents must be carriers. So if the sire of the litter is not a carrier, the puppies should never seize. You have to hope, if it is inherited epilepsy, he is not a carrier. I would not jump to conclusions and throw out the babies with the bath water. Slow down, take some deep breaths. Time will tell - there is nothing you can do about it now.
Plus, your girl's seizures may be caused by something environmental or who-knows-what. Sometimes, the best decision is to decide not to decide. This sounds like one of those times.
Ann,
Sorry to hear this- you should try to rule out low calcium, including electrolytes, AED levels, glucose, and toxicology screen. As another poster posted, this is not a death sentence. Keep a calendar of seizures, treat your bitch as the vet instructs and if she is pregnant, so be it. Place as pets.
I wish you the best.
All,
This is a little off topic but this just came across my desk, for anyone who might know of dogs affected by seizures:
NC State is hosting a clinical trial for dogs. Info can be found here:
http://www.bizjournals.com/triangle/blog/2013/08/your-dog-has-issues-with-epilepsy.html?ana=twt
Check out the food. Some additives can cause seizures. Changing to a non-preserved food made the difference for the one we had. She started seizing at three. After trying different things (since the vet ruled out epilepsy) the dog stopped seizing with the new food. Never had another for the rest of her life.
Check out the food. Some additives can cause seizures. Changing to a non-preserved food made the difference for the one we had. She started seizing at three. After trying different things (since the vet ruled out epilepsy) the dog stopped seizing with the new food. Never had another for the rest of her life.
I have never heard of being able to rule out Epilepsy, how exactly did your vet do that? I have heard of ruling out other causes, leading to the diagnosis of Idiopathic Epilepsy. Or finding another cause, therefore ruling out Idiopathic Epilepsy.
I had three dogs have seizures when I switched to grain free. Two from one line, one from another. Interestingly -- all within 15 minutes of eating. One day -- all three at the same time. One girl had a second grandmal a week after being taken off the food. Nothing since and it has been over 2 years.
Vet called it quite quickly. Fed milk thistle for 8 weeks to clean out system.
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I have never heard of being able to rule out Epilepsy, how exactly did your vet do that? I have heard of ruling out other causes, leading to the diagnosis of Idiopathic Epilepsy. Or finding another cause, therefore ruling out Idiopathic Epilepsy. [/quote]
In my dog, who started having seizures at 6, Epilepsy was ruled out via CT scan. There were changes to the brain that are not seen in dogs with epilepsy. The vet called in the middle of the scan to let me know it was definitely not epilepsy.