Michelle Baldwin
New member
Seizures? Taking my big boy Typo to vet. He threw up on floor and fell over in a fit. Peed on the floor , then woke up and is acting doopey....anyone else had this before?
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Emma's been having seizures for a full year now. She only peed the first time she had her and she's had 26 since then. I learned much from [MENTION=572]Libra926[/MENTION] (Cheryl) so when Emma had her first I knew what was happening. Emma first started off having just one seizure at a time, but then she starting have clusters (2-3 within a short period of time). It's important during the seizure time to be calm and keep them at least on their side so they don't go on their back (they can aspirate if so). Your vet will most likey put him on Potassium Bromide and then possibly Phenobarbital (that the most common it seems at first). Keep a good record keeping on the time, date, length and other details of Tybo's seizures as it will help you and your vet if he has more and you'll be able to keep track of the time/days in between one to the next seizure. There's a chance Tybo will only have the one but more than likely he will have more (no one knows how many or when the next one will be). Finding the right combo of meds is the hardest part and it takes time. We're still trying to figure out Emma's. Once they doubled her Potassium Bromide and she ended up having Ataxia really bad (lameness) so she was put back down on her original does. I finally took her to see a Neurologist 2 weeks ago and she saw Dr. Lane at Rocky Mountain Veterinary Neurology again tomorrow for more blood work. Dr. Lane completely changed her meds up and we're transitioning them right now from the Phenobarbital to Zonisamide. We now also administer intranasal midazolam after her seizures. So far since mid-October she's finally broken her spell of having them every 10-14 days.
Oh another thing I almost forgot to say, is keep a very close eye on Tybo for at least an hour if not more after his seizure. It takes time for them to fully come out of it and they can be very clingy during that time (they need your reassurance). They can be loopy still and clumsy during this time, this is normal. We have stairs in our house so when I leave I know gate Emma off to the part of the house that doesn't have stairs so in case she has a seizure while we're gone she won't tumble down them.
I'm sure Cheryl will be along soon too to add a bunch more. Hugs to you and Tybo, it's not easy watching them go through this.