K9epilepsy.com

Spreading Awareness & Supporting Canine Epilepsy Research

London

Idiopathic Epilepsy

June 6, 2014 – December 13, 2019

November is Epilepsy Awareness Month

Dogs get epilepsy too.

This site is dedicated to all the dogs and their families affected by Canine Epilepsy, and the special people in vet neurology who help these doggos live their best lives.

London

Idiopathic Epilepsy

June 6, 2014 – December 13, 2019

Benefiting the Texas A&M Veterinary Neurology Fund

Canine epilepsy awareness and education helps us continue London’s legacy, even after she’s crossed the Rainbow Bridge. London lived an extremely happy life, absolutely brimming with love and support. Most dogs living with epilepsy can and do live the same, supported by families and veterinary professionals who shoulder the heavy burden of daily management, safety, and emergency response.

The primary goal of this site is to raise awareness and echo reliable information about canine epilepsy. In November, as it is National Epilepsy Awareness Month, we’re working to raise money for the Texas A&M Neurology Fund.

As the leading veterinary neurology and neurosurgery service in Texas, TAMU’s team of neuro pros & students have helped hundreds of animals live a better life through a collaborative team approach. Please consider making a monetary donation to support their work and the patients they serve.

While a direct donation will most assuredly reach the TAMU Neurology Fund, I can’t track it. If you choose to donate to the GoFundMe campaign, I’m matching dollar-for-dollar on the first $250 we raise.

Why Texas A&M?

A&M has a Neurology Fund

Epilepsy only affects between 0.75% & 3% of dogs, so finding a canine epilepsy charity is challenging. Supporting neuro patients & the team at A&M is pretty close.

London, an all black miniature schnauzer, in a crate at Texas A&M Small Animal Hospital with a catheter and wearing seizure bells around her neck.

A&M saved London's life

London suffered from cluster seizures. The neurology team at TAMU helped us manage and treat her episodes - and save her life when home remedies couldn't.

A&M Neruo now treats Artemis

Artemis has a different neurological condition. It was a needle in a haystack, but A&M cracked her case, too.

This November Spread Awareness

Every share, every dollar, every conversation helps! Epilepsy is a disease that relies on community support