Veterinary Guide to Epilepsy & Seizures in Dogs 2025 🐶🩺
In this article
Veterinary Guide to Epilepsy & Seizures in Dogs 2025 🐶🩺
By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc
🔍 Introduction
Seizures are sudden surges in brain electrical activity, resulting in convulsions, behavioral changes, and unconsciousness. Recurrent seizures without an identifiable cause indicate epilepsy. This guide explains causes, seizure care, diagnosis, treatment, and long-term management for optimal outcomes. 🧠
💡 What Is Epilepsy?
- Epilepsy is diagnosed when a dog experiences two or more unprovoked seizures and no underlying lesion is found—also known as idiopathic or primary epilepsy.
- Affects ~0.6–0.75 % of dogs; certain breeds (e.g., Beagles, Collies, Labs, Poodles, Shepherds) have a genetic predisposition.
🚨 Causes of Seizures
- Idiopathic epilepsy: common in 1–5 yr olds; genetic basis suspected.
- Structural causes: tumors, trauma, hydrocephalus, inflammation—more common in puppies or seniors.
- Reactive seizures: metabolic issues (hypoglycemia, organ failure, toxins, heatstroke) trigger isolated events.
🔍 Seizure Types & Signs
- Focal: twitching, fly-biting, limited to one body part.
- Generalized (grand mal): stiffening, paddling, salivation, urination/defecation, collapse.
- Cluster seizures: multiple events within 24 h; risk of turning into status epilepticus.
- Psychomotor/focal behavioral: brief staring or abnormal behaviors.
🛡 What to Do During a Seizure
- Stay calm, ensure safety—clear the surrounding area & cushion the head.
- Do NOT restrain the dog or place objects in the mouth.
- Time the seizure. If >5 min or clusters, emergency vet attention is critical.
- Post-ictal phase: watch for disorientation, temporary blindness, and pacing.
🔬 Diagnostic Steps
- Detailed history & seizure log (timing, triggers, duration).
- Bloodwork & urinalysis to rule out metabolic causes (liver, kidney, electrolytes).
- Imaging (MRI/CT) and CSF analysis when structural disease is suspected.
💊 Medications & Management
- First-line anticonvulsants: phenobarbital, potassium bromide; newer options include levetiracetam, zonisamide, and imepitoin.
- Medication tailored by seizure frequency/severity; blood level monitoring critical for safety and efficacy.
- Emergency protocols for clusters/status epilepticus: rectal diazepam or IV anticonvulsants.
- Supportive lifestyle measures: consistent schedule, avoid known triggers, implement seizure log.
📈 Prognosis & Quality of Life
- Many dogs can achieve ≥50% seizure reduction; full seizure freedom in ~14% of cases.
- Side effects (sedation, polyphagia) are common—close monitoring helps maintain comfort and quality of life.
- Ongoing checkups for drug monitoring and potential dose adjustments.
🛡 Prevention & Long-Term Support
- Use a seizure diary and medication reminders (via apps like Woopf).
- Diet and supplements (e.g., medium-chain triglycerides) may offer added support.
- Genetic counseling for predisposed breeds; early screening, where available.
- Consider seizure alert/response dogs in severe cases.
🔧 Tools & Services
- Ask A Vet App: 24/7 veterinary support, advice on seizure safety, dosing, and when to seek urgent care. 📱
✅ Final Thoughts
Epilepsy is manageable with the right diagnosis, medication, and lifestyle approach. Work closely with your veterinarian, maintain a seizure diary, and use supportive tools like Ask AVet. 🐾❤️
Download the Ask A Vet app today to get expert guidance, seizure management tools, and peace of mind. 🧠📱