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Seizure Trained Dogs Greenville SC

Specially trained seizure dogs supposedly can pick up on subtle physiological changes in their human companions that can begin up to 45 minutes before an epileptic seizure. The dogs then warn the humans so they can find a safe environment or take precautionary measures.

Randall C Thomas
864-385-6565
393 Woods Lake Road
Greenville, SC
Pet Med Mobile
(864) 232-2718
707 E Stone Ave
Greenville, SC
Ambassador Animal Hospital Pa
(864) 271-1112
715 Wade Hampton Blvd
Greenville, SC
Welsh, Paula, Dvm - North Greenville Animal Hosp
(864) 244-8281
1300 Stallings Rd
Greenville, SC
Pleasantburg Veterinary Clinic Inc
(864) 232-6445
634 S Pleasantburg Dr
Greenville, SC
Rocky Creek Veterinary Hospital & Pet Resort
(864) 735-8972
111 Ebenezer Rd. 29651
Greer, SC
Richland Creek Animal Clinic
(864) 232-2718
707 E Stone Ave
Greenville, SC
North Greenville Animal Hosp
(864) 244-8281
1300 Stallings Rd
Greenville, SC
Pleasantburg Veterinary Clinic, Inc.
864 232-6445
634 S. Pleasantburg Drive
Greenville, SC
Haywood Road Animal Hospital
(864) 288-7472
520 Haywood Rd
Greenville, SC
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Dogs Respond to Non-Epileptic Seizures

Some dogs trained to detect epileptic seizures are actually predicting psychological seizures, rather than true epileptic attacks, new research suggests.

The studies don’t indicate that seizure dogs aren’t performing as trained, but that a percentage are warning their owners of psychologically based seizures, rather than epileptic seizures, explained Orrin Devinsky, director of the Comprehensive Epilepsy Center at New York University.

Specially trained seizure dogs supposedly can pick up on subtle physiological changes in their human companions that can begin up to 45 minutes before an epileptic seizure. The dogs then warn the humans so they can find a safe environment or take precautionary measures.

It’s important to define what kind of seizures these patients have because certain drugs are used to treat epilepsy, while other therapies are for non-epileptic seizures, explained Gregory L. Krauss, an associate professor of neurology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore.

Krauss was lead author of one of two papers documenting the phenomenon in the Jan. 23, 2007, issue of Neurology. The two studies looked at a total of seven people who had seizure-response dogs. Most were monitored to detect abnormal electrical activity in the brain of the kind that causes epileptic seizures.

Four of the participants had no abnormal electrical activity during their seizures, and were diagnosed instead with psychogenic non-epileptic seizures.

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