We just finished a seizure. Â I was feeding the dogs their dinner; Jessie was done and gone to her bed, Tilley was licking out the last morsels in the bottom of her bowl and Luke was only mid-way. Â He suddenly stopped eating and gave me that look. Â I asked him to finish his dinner and he started to shake, I knew we had little time to go get comfortable. Â I dropped the dishes and ran into the living room, he barely made it around the corner and it hit. Â I wrapped my arms around Luke and gently let him fall to the ground.
The seizures are almost always the same. Â It starts out slow, he is a little stiff but still with me. Â Next comes the intermission, a short span between the two phases of seizing. Â He relaxes but remains on the floor and within a minute he is gone, his eyes roll back and his body stiffens like a board. Â This is the toughest part, I have to watch out for his legs; holding his front ones and keeping his back legs from gouging me. Â All this while assuring that he does not injured himself. Â Seeing this phase of the seizure is very disturbing, you do get use to it and just deal.
After his seizure stops he takes quite a while to come around, as soon as the panting starts I know he is coming out of it. Â His eyes refocus and he sits up, always trying to get to his feet too soon. Â Then for an hour afterwards he is stuck to me like glue, I usually turn the tv on and we get comfy on the sofa. Â Tonight I’m blogging as he sleeps beside me.
Luke is epileptic, he hasn’t had a seizure for sometime before tonight. He started seizuring at the age of 3.5, the normal onset age is between 3 and 5 years of age. We have been able to pinpoint his seizures to stress or chemicals pretty much. Stress can play a large role in many dogs that have seizures. That said; stress is dealt with differently by each dog, so how much stress is too much stress is very individual. Luke is a stress monkey so it doesn’t take too much to push him over the edge.
No comments:
Post a Comment