What Is Idiopathic Epilepsy
Idiopathic epilepsy is the most common chronic neurological disease in dogs — 0.6-0.75% population prevalence, with specific breeds substantially over-represented.
“Idiopathic” means:
- No identifiable structural brain lesion
- No metabolic cause
- No toxic exposure
- Often genetic/hereditary with breed predisposition
- Age at onset 1-5 years is classic
The IVETF Framework
The International Veterinary Epilepsy Task Force (IVETF) published consensus guidelines in 2015 standardising:
- Diagnostic criteria (Tier 1 / 2 / 3)
- Treatment threshold
- Drug selection
- Monitoring protocols
- Emergency management
Diagnostic Tiers
| Tier | Requirements |
|---|---|
| Tier 1 | Age 1-5 years at onset + normal interictal exam + ≥2 unprovoked seizures >24h apart |
| Tier 2 | Tier 1 + normal bloods + urinalysis + CSF + abdominal ultrasound (or systemic workup) |
| Tier 3 | Tier 2 + normal MRI brain + normal CSF |
Tier 1 is sufficient for treating most idiopathic epilepsy patients. Tier 2-3 reserves MRI for atypical cases:
- Onset >5 years (suggests structural disease)
- Abnormal interictal exam
- Focal seizures with consciousness preservation
- Treatment resistance
- Asymmetric findings
Treatment Threshold (IVETF 2015)
Start antiepileptic medication if ANY of:
- ≥2 seizures in 6 months (annualised >2/year)
- Cluster seizures (≥2 in 24 hours)
- Status epilepticus (any seizure >5 minutes OR continuous)
- Severe post-ictal signs (>24h confusion/blindness/ataxia)
- Progressively worsening pattern
Below threshold:
- Single isolated seizures typically not treated
- Watchful waiting with seizure diary
- Owner factors (work, lifestyle, seizure anxiety) sometimes drive earlier treatment
First-Line Antiepileptic Drugs
Phenobarbital
Oldest evidence base; cornerstone of canine epilepsy treatment.
- Dose: 2-3 mg/kg PO q12h starting; titrate to clinical effect and serum level
- Serum target: 25-35 μg/mL (110-150 μmol/L) at trough
- Monitoring: CBC + liver enzymes at 14 days, 30 days, 90 days, then every 6 months
- Side effects: sedation (improves 2-4 weeks), polyphagia, polydipsia, polyuria
- Rare serious: hepatic failure, bone marrow suppression, superficial necrolytic dermatitis
- ~85% achieve adequate control on monotherapy or with KBr add-on
Potassium Bromide (KBr)
Long-half-life adjunct to phenobarbital, sometimes monotherapy.
- Dose: 20-30 mg/kg PO q24h with food
- Serum target: 1-3 mg/mL at trough
- Steady state: 3-4 months (long half-life ~25-46 days)
- Side effects: sedation/ataxia (worse initially, improves), polyphagia, GI signs
- Avoid: high-chloride diets (chloride competes with bromide — changing diet alters levels)
- Combined pheno + KBr: ~85% control of refractory epilepsy
- NOT for cats (pulmonary toxicity)
Levetiracetam (Keppra)
Newer, well-tolerated; major advantages and one major limitation.
Advantages:
- No hepatic metabolism — safe in liver disease
- Minimal drug interactions
- No blood monitoring required
- Useful for pulse dosing in cluster prevention
Disadvantages:
- 8-hourly dosing (extended-release q12h available)
- Tolerance effect in some dogs over time (effect declines)
- Expensive in some markets
Dosing:
- Standard: 20-30 mg/kg PO q8h
- Extended-release: q12h
- Pulse for clusters (Packer 2015): 60 mg/kg q8h × 3 doses after first seizure
Zonisamide
Sulfonamide-based newer antiepileptic.
- Dose: 10 mg/kg PO q12h
- Well-tolerated
- Hepatic metabolism — caution with liver disease
- Weekly cost concerns in some markets
Imepitoin (Pexion)
Veterinary-licensed for idiopathic epilepsy in Europe.
- Dose: 10-30 mg/kg q12h
- Lower efficacy than phenobarbital for severe cases
- Faster onset of action
- Less sedation than phenobarbital
Status Epilepticus – The Emergency
Any seizure >5 minutes is a MEDICAL EMERGENCY with significant brain injury and mortality risk.
At-Home Emergency Protocol
All owners of seizing dogs should have:
- Rectal diazepam 1-2 mg/kg (prescription) — administered per anum
- OR Intranasal midazolam 0.2 mg/kg (some clinics prescribe)
- Can repeat once after 10-15 minutes if no response
- Then proceed to emergency vet immediately
Vet Emergency Management
- IV diazepam/midazolam to terminate seizure
- IV levetiracetam load
- Phenobarbital load if not already on it
- Refractory cases: continuous rate infusion (CRI) propofol or midazolam in hospital
- Ventilatory support sometimes needed
- Cooling if hyperthermic (often >40°C/104°F from sustained muscle activity)
- Hospitalisation 24-72 hours post-status
Cluster Seizure At-Home Protocol
Packer et al. 2015 validated levetiracetam pulse to abort clusters:
- 60 mg/kg PO q8h × 3 doses starting after first seizure of cluster
- Reduces hospital admissions
- Discuss prescription with your vet
Onset Age Workup
Onset <1 Year
Workup essential — consider:
- Hydrocephalus (toy breeds especially Chihuahua, Pomeranian, Yorkie)
- Lissencephaly (Lhasa Apso, some others)
- Portosystemic shunt (small breeds — check bile acids, ammonia)
- Juvenile hypoglycaemia (toy breeds)
- Toxin exposure
- Inflammatory disease
MRI + CSF + bloods + bile acids strongly recommended.
Onset 1-5 Years
Classic idiopathic epilepsy — Tier 1 diagnosis usually sufficient.
Onset >5 Years
More likely structural epilepsy than idiopathic.
Differentials:
- Brain tumour (meningioma most common; glioma in Boxer/Boston/Bulldog; lymphoma)
- Vascular event (stroke)
- Inflammatory MUE (granulomatous meningoencephalitis)
- Metabolic (hepatic encephalopathy from PSS or chronic liver disease, hypoglycaemia, electrolyte disturbance, uraemia)
- Infectious (meningitis, ehrlichiosis)
MRI + CSF + full bloods + bile acids essential.
Breed Predisposition
| Breed | Notes |
|---|---|
| Border Collie | Hereditary; some lines drug-resistant |
| Australian Shepherd | Hereditary; similar to Border Collie |
| German Shepherd | Hereditary; earlier onset (1-3 years) |
| Labrador / Golden Retriever | Moderate predisposition; common in clinical practice |
| Beagle | Hereditary; reported in research colonies |
| Boxer | Epilepsy + brain tumour predisposition (MRI atypical cases) |
| Belgian Shepherd / Tervuren | Strong hereditary basis |
| Vizsla | Increasingly recognised |
| Standard Poodle | Documented predisposition |
Drug-Resistant Epilepsy
~20-30% of idiopathic epilepsy dogs are drug-resistant (failure of 2+ antiepileptic drugs at appropriate doses).
Options:
Multidrug Regimen
- Pheno + KBr + levetiracetam or zonisamide
- Optimise serum levels of phenobarbital and KBr first
- Add third drug if still inadequate
Ketogenic / MCT Diet
- Purina NeuroCare — formulated MCT diet
- ~50% reduction in seizures in some dogs (Law et al. 2015)
- Easy to combine with antiepileptic drugs
- Cost-effective lifestyle intervention
Cannabidiol (CBD)
- Emerging evidence (McGrath et al. 2019)
- Reduced seizure frequency in some refractory dogs
- Doses: 2-5 mg/kg q12h (varying products)
- Quality control of CBD product critical
- Drug interactions with phenobarbital possible
Specialist Referral
Neurology referral for:
- Treatment resistance
- Atypical presentation
- Repeat MRI consideration
- Specialty antiepileptics (felbamate, topiramate)
Owner Seizure Diary
Critical for management decisions — apps available (RVC Seizure Diary, Petable).
Record for each seizure:
- Date/time
- Duration (start to stop)
- Character (generalised tonic-clonic vs focal vs absence)
- Pre-ictal signs (anxiety, restlessness in hours before)
- Post-ictal signs (confusion, blindness, ataxia)
- Post-ictal duration
- Triggers if any (stress, sleep deprivation, hormonal)
- Video if possible — extremely useful for vet
Bring to every vet visit.
Lifestyle For Epileptic Dogs
- Regular routine — sleep, feeding, exercise (disruption can trigger seizures)
- Stress reduction
- Avoid known triggers (some dogs: flash lights, vehicles, fireworks)
- Essential vaccines only on schedule (some debate about vaccine triggers — not contraindicated)
- Safe environment — no stairs/water/balcony access during unsupervised time when seizure could be dangerous
- Identification tag noting medical condition and medications
- Owner education — recognise pre-ictal signs, prepare safe space, time seizures, video if possible
Long-Term Prognosis
With appropriate treatment:
- ~70-80% achieve good seizure control (≥50% reduction)
- Median survival comparable to non-epileptic dogs
- Quality of life generally good with adequate control
- Drug side effects manageable with monitoring
- ~20-30% drug-resistant requiring multimodal approach
Worse prognosis:
- Onset <2 years (more aggressive disease)
- Cluster seizures
- Status epilepticus history
- Drug resistance
- Large breed dogs (some studies)
Honest Caveats
- Idiopathic epilepsy is a lifelong condition — daily medications, regular monitoring, vigilance
- Drug side effects are universal (especially phenobarbital sedation initially)
- Complete seizure control achieved in only ~15-30% of dogs
- ~50% reduction is the realistic primary goal
- Drug-resistant epilepsy is challenging and may need specialist input
- Emergency status epilepticus carries significant mortality despite treatment
- This calculator helps you understand the framework — drug selection and dosing require veterinary supervision
Conclusion
Idiopathic epilepsy affects 0.6-0.75% of dogs with specific breeds substantially over-represented. The IVETF 2015 treatment threshold is ≥2 seizures in 6 months, cluster, status, severe post-ictal, or worsening pattern. Phenobarbital remains the first-line drug with ~85% adequate control on monotherapy or with KBr. Levetiracetam has growing role (no hepatic metabolism, pulse dosing for clusters). Status epilepticus is an emergency — all owners should have at-home rectal diazepam or intranasal midazolam. Onset age guides workup intensity — onset 1-5 years usually Tier 1 idiopathic; onset >5 years warrants MRI for structural causes. Owner seizure diary is critical for management decisions. With appropriate treatment, ~70-80% achieve good seizure control and quality of life is generally good with adequate management.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should my dog with seizures start medication?
The IVETF (International Veterinary Epilepsy Task Force) 2015 treatment threshold: START antiepileptic medication if ANY of (1) 2 or more seizures in 6 months (annualised more than 2/year); (2) cluster seizures – 2 or more in 24 hours; (3) status epilepticus – any seizure more than 5 minutes or continuous; (4) severe post-ictal signs lasting more than 24 hours; (5) progressively worsening pattern. Below threshold (single isolated seizure, infrequent, well-controlled): watchful waiting with seizure diary. Owner factors (work, lifestyle, seizure anxiety) sometimes drive earlier treatment in consultation with vet.
What is the best medication for dog epilepsy?
PHENOBARBITAL is the OLDEST EVIDENCE BASE and remains first-line – about 85% achieve adequate control on monotherapy or with KBr add-on; serum target 25-35 ug/mL, monitoring CBC + liver enzymes regularly. POTASSIUM BROMIDE (KBr) often added to phenobarbital – long half-life means steady state in 3-4 months; target 1-3 mg/mL. LEVETIRACETAM (Keppra) – newer, no hepatic metabolism, no blood monitoring, but 8-hourly dosing and tolerance issues. ZONISAMIDE – newer, well-tolerated. IMEPITOIN (Pexion) – European veterinary-licensed for idiopathic epilepsy. Drug selection in consultation with vet based on severity, comorbidities, budget, lifestyle.
What is status epilepticus in dogs?
STATUS EPILEPTICUS = any seizure lasting MORE THAN 5 MINUTES or multiple seizures without recovery between them. This is a MEDICAL EMERGENCY with significant brain injury and mortality risk – hyperthermia from sustained muscle activity (often more than 40C/104F), hypoxia, metabolic acidosis, rhabdomyolysis leading to acute kidney injury. URGENT vet attention required. At-home emergency: rectal diazepam 1-2 mg/kg or intranasal midazolam 0.2 mg/kg if prescribed by your vet – have this ON HAND for any seizure-prone dog. Vet management: IV diazepam/midazolam load + phenobarbital load + sometimes propofol/midazolam CRI in hospital with ventilatory support. Hospitalisation 24-72h post-status typical.
What are cluster seizures in dogs?
CLUSTER SEIZURES = 2 OR MORE SEIZURES IN 24 HOURS. Higher risk of progression to status epilepticus and brain injury. INDEPENDENTLY MEETS IVETF treatment threshold even at relatively low overall annual seizure frequency. AT-HOME EMERGENCY PROTOCOL: rectal diazepam 1-2 mg/kg or intranasal midazolam 0.2 mg/kg after any seizure, repeatable once after 10-15 minutes. PACKER ET AL. 2015 protocol: LEVETIRACETAM PULSE 60 mg/kg PO q8h x 3 doses starting after first seizure of cluster – reduces hospital admissions substantially. Discuss prescription with your vet for at-home emergency kit.
What breeds are prone to epilepsy?
Many breeds have documented predisposition: BORDER COLLIE and AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERD (hereditary, some lines drug-resistant); GERMAN SHEPHERD (hereditary, earlier 1-3 year onset); LABRADOR and GOLDEN RETRIEVER (moderate predisposition); BEAGLE (hereditary); BOXER (also predisposed to brain tumours – MRI atypical cases over 5 years); BELGIAN SHEPHERD / TERVUREN (strong hereditary); VIZSLA (increasingly recognised); STANDARD POODLE; FINNISH SPITZ; LAGOTTO ROMAGNOLO. Idiopathic epilepsy in these breeds typically onset 1-5 years; outside this age range MORE WORKUP indicated for structural causes.
Can dogs with epilepsy live normal lives?
Yes – WITH APPROPRIATE TREATMENT about 70-80% achieve good seizure control (more than 50% reduction). Median survival comparable to non-epileptic dogs. Quality of life generally good with adequate control. LIFELONG MEDICATION needed in most cases. About 20-30% are DRUG-RESISTANT requiring multimodal approach (multiple drugs, ketogenic/MCT diet, possibly CBD, specialist referral). LIFESTYLE adjustments help: regular routine for sleep/feeding/exercise, stress reduction, avoid known triggers, safe environment for seizure events, identification tag noting medical condition. Worse prognosis with onset under 2 years, cluster seizures, status history, drug resistance.
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References & Further Reading
The dosing ranges and safety information on this page are drawn from the following veterinary references. Always defer to your own veterinarian and the manufacturer’s label for your specific product.
- De Risio L, Bhatti S, Munana K, et al. International Veterinary Epilepsy Task Force consensus proposal: diagnostic approach to epilepsy in dogs. BMC Veterinary Research, 2015.
- Bhatti SF, De Risio L, Munana K, et al. International Veterinary Epilepsy Task Force consensus proposal: medical treatment of canine epilepsy in Europe. BMC Veterinary Research, 2015.
- Packer RM, Nye G, Porter SE, Volk HA. Assessment into the usage of levetiracetam in a canine epilepsy clinic. BMC Veterinary Research, 2015.
- McGrath S, Bartner LR, Rao S, Packer RA, Gustafson DL. Randomized blinded controlled clinical trial to assess the effect of oral cannabidiol administration in addition to conventional antiepileptic treatment on seizure frequency in dogs with intractable idiopathic epilepsy. JAVMA, 2019.
- Law TH, Davies ES, Pan Y, et al. A randomised trial of a medium-chain TAG diet as treatment for dogs with idiopathic epilepsy. British Journal of Nutrition, 2015.
- Berendt M, Farquhar RG, Mandigers PJ, et al. International veterinary epilepsy task force consensus report on epilepsy definition, classification and terminology in companion animals. BMC Veterinary Research, 2015.
- PuppaDogs. Levetiracetam Dosage Calculator, Gabapentin Dosage Calculator and Quality of Life Calculator. puppadogs.com.
















