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2
28th March 04:42
External User
Posts: 1
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I think that's fine - vets need to run some baseline tests,
and specialists can see things that general practice vets might not. The cause for seizures is frequently difficult or impossible to diagnose. It's important, however, to get them under control. Has your vet prescribed an anti-seizure medication (usually phenobarbitol or potassium bromide)? If not, you need to get him to do that ASAP, or find another vet. -- Melinda Shore - Software longa, hardware brevis - shore@panix.com Bad policies lead to bad results. |
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3
28th March 09:54
External User
Posts: 1
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shore@panix.com (Melinda Shore) said in rec.pets.dogs.health:
What Melinda said. I'd also like to know if your dog is on medication - some of your Golden's symptoms seem bizzare, in my experience. Meanwhile, read through the health links on one of my pages: http://www.rocky-dog.com/Links/LinksMenu.html I've grouped them, top to bottom, as to how useful they've been to me. And, FWIW, many of us here have way too much experience with seizures and epilepsy. Feel free to ask anything, no matter how silly it seems, and offer even the most innocuous observations of your dog's symptoms. -- --Matt. Rocky's a Dog. |
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