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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Levetiracetam treatment helped five dogs with myoclonic seizures

By Linder, J et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2024·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Use of levetiracetam for the successful treatment of suspected myoclonic seizures: five dogs (2016-2022).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Five dogs were treated for myoclonic seizures, which are characterized by brief jerking movements of the body. These seizures had been occurring for varying lengths of time, from one day to a year, and one dog also had a generalized seizure. All dogs were given levetiracetam, an anticonvulsant medication, and the results were promising: two dogs became seizure-free for over a year, while two others had a significant reduction in seizure frequency. One dog saw an immediate improvement after just one month of treatment.

People also search for: dog myoclonic seizures treatment · levetiracetam for dogs · dog jerking movements原因

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Myoclonic seizures are considered a type of generalised seizure characterised by brief, jerking movements of the body. The aim of this study is to describe cases of suspected canine myoclonic seizure of idiopathic aetiology and to discuss the successful use of the anticonvulsant levetiracetam as treatment in each of these cases. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Dogs with epileptic myoclonus suspected to be idiopathic in aetiology were considered for inclusion. Medical records were reviewed for physical and neurologic examination findings, clinicopathologic results, and diagnostic imaging results. All included dogs were treated with levetiracetam, and their response was reported. RESULTS: Five dogs were included, all of which had suspected myoclonic seizures either observed in-person or on video recording by a board-certified veterinary neurologist. The duration of myoclonic seizures preceding treatment ranged from one day to one year. One dog also experienced a generalised tonic-clonic seizure. All dogs were treated with levetiracetam. Two dogs experienced long-term myoclonic seizure freedom (duration seizure-free of at least 1 year), and two dogs experienced marked decreased myoclonic seizure frequency. One dog experienced immediate abatement of myoclonic seizures, although levetiracetam was only utilised for 1 month following onset of myoclonic seizures in this patient. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Myoclonic seizures can be idiopathic in aetiology. Levetiracetam can be used effectively to rapidly stop myoclonic seizures and to decrease the frequency of myoclonic seizures.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38566458/