Normally, the cat epilepsy will have their first seizure between the age of two and three. This time frame is not accurate one it may vary; rarely cat epilepsy is seen in very young ones. Some of the basic symptoms of feline seizures vary mostly and frequently imitate behaviors which cats commonly pamper in.
Feline seizures produce symptoms that range from disgustingly strange behaviors to lack of body control like aggressing invisible objects, mad running and rolling, and connivances with household objects. Feline seizures depend on the strength of the cats and are commonly represented using three terms such as status epilepticus, grand mal and petit mal. Petit mal seizures are the mildest which develops a blank gaze, tremble one leg, or cry out in severe pain. Grand mal seizures are the most common with symptoms like falling to one side, urinating or defecating uncontrolled manner, paddling the feet, foaming at the mouth, and sometimes your cat also cry in pain. Status epilepticus is the most dangerous form of seizure.
The symptoms are same as grand mal seizure, but it last for more than a few hours. If a seizure endures for longer time, it will shoot up your cat’s body temperature abnormally and even cause death. |