Annie Update
For those who may be wondering, I wanted to give you the latest on our 11 year old Golden Retriever, Annie.
If you read yesterday’s post, you know that Annie had a seizure the day before and we took her to an emergency clinic.
Yesterday afternoon, Annie had another seizure. This is the first time I was there from beginning to end. Have you ever seen a dog (or anyone) have a seizure? It’s heartbreaking because you’re helpless. You just have to wait it out.
Yesterday was one of those great Sundays when all I had to do was read the paper, catch up on email and wait for the Sunday night HBO shows to come on (have you been watching The Pacific and Treme? Terrific).
Annie had been snoozing peacefully most of the day. I’d walk by her, rub her belly, pat her face, nuzzle my face against her snout and continue on.
I was at my computer when I heard my wife Carol calling (shades of Annie’s first seizure). I knew by Carol’s voice that she wasn’t going to tell me we’d won the lottery.
Annie was on her side, her legs flailing, her mouth open and small gobs of spittle oozing from between her jaws. I sat beside her and stroked her, praying for it to end. I learned later that, during a seizure, the dog is oblivious to everything, so the stroking was more to calm me than her (I also learned never to put your hands near a seizing dog’s mouth. The dog may be involuntarily snapping its jaws and you could get bitten. Annie didn’t do this.).
I started my digital watch to see how long the seizure was lasting, then forgot to look once the seizure ended. It seemed like 10 minutes and was probably closer to 3.
Afterwards, Annie behaved as she did after the seizure Saturday night. You would have thought she drank a bottle of Jack Daniel’s. For one hour (one hour!) we followed her meanderings around the house and kept her from banging into walls and furniture. I recalled pictures of epileptic children wearing football helmets. I now have first hand knowledge of why.
Suddenly, I could see by Annie’s good eye (her right eye has Horner’s disease which causes her eyelid to droop to the point where she can’t see out of it) that she was back among us. You know how you’ll hear descriptions of a light going on when people come out of a coma? Well, that’s what I saw in Annie’s left eye. I could literally see in her eye that she was coming back to full consciousness.
We gave her the 90 mgs of Phenobarbital that the vet at the emergency clinic had told us to give her. Phenobarbital is also given to humans for epilepsy. We called to leave a message with our regular vet to make an appointment as early as we could on Monday. We received a call back (they take calls 24 hours even though they’re not open on the weekends) and got an appointment for 7:40 this morning.
Annie drank and drank and drank water and spent the next two hours (two hours!) meandering on her own without bumping into anything. We called the emergency clinic and they told us there was really nothing to do but watch her. The danger is that she would have a seizure, come out of it and seizure again. Fortunately, that didn’t happen. However, Annie was still meandering when we went to bed (Carol and I told each other only half jokingly that we should sleep in shifts which would have been better than what did happen. We both stayed up most of the night).
Annie did not have a seizure during the night. In the morning, I gave her another 90 mgs of Phenobarbital as the vet had prescribed. To my amazement, when I put food in her bowl, she ate it. For the last two weeks, the only way she would eat was if we fed her out of our hand and she wouldn’t always eat even then.
When I took her on a walk, I’m not kidding, she seemed to walk faster than she had been walking before the seizures.
When we got to the vet this morning, he told us that Phenobarbital takes several weeks to build up to a therapeutic dosage, so it’s unlikely the drug had anything to do with Annie’s renewed vigor. I didn’t take the drug but I can tell you that my vigor is really good right now seeing Annie so “perky.”
So what’s next? Annie’s blood work is good, her temperature and white blood count are normal. The vet drew blood to check on Valley Fever (a mysterious disease I still don’t understand even after living for 26 years in Phoenix) and deer ticks (we spend part of the summer in Washington State). We’ll get those results back in 2 days.
If all that’s negative, then we have to decide whether or not to do an MRI because the only possibility left is neurological damage. Besides the fact that it can cost as much as $2,000.00 (there goes the trip to Paris. Maybe Paris, Texas), what would we do if a tumor or some equally horrible thing were found? Annie is 11. We won’t put her through surgery.
If you’re interested, I got good information about seizures and treatments at http://www.canine-epilepsy.net/basics/basics_main.html. It’s long and I skipped some parts, but I did learn that Phenobarbital can cause liver damage over time so Annie will need to have regular blood tests (the article also suggested that liver damage is treatable).
No great lesson to be imparted today except the tried and true: Let’s love each other while we can. Nothing lasts forever.
Thanks for your time and I’d love to read your comments.




April 28th, 2010 at 1:30 pm
I have your blog linked on my stress test page which is linked on my Qondio article, “My son is a professional Horseshow Photographer”. I just happened to check in to what was happening in your life as I clicked on Annie’s picture on my website.
I had a lab that had periodic seizures. It is a hard thing to witness to such a close friend.
April 28th, 2010 at 6:30 pm
Thanks for getting back in touch, Franklyn. I look forward to seeing you and (wouldn’t it be great), Theresa. Yes, it’s terrible to watch a loved one go through the seizure even though their completely oblivious while they’re in the seizure. Thanks for the link.
May 25th, 2010 at 10:18 am
You rock! I always love reading your stuff..
May 25th, 2010 at 2:43 pm
Thank you.