Hello all. Thanks for the well wishing for Leo.
Leo is a lot better from that big grand-mal. It generally takes him 24 to 48 hours to shake it off.
Gill: You are lucky that Franta gives you a good sign one is coming. It is possible Leo does as well, but since I adopted him (2000) every seizure except 3 have happened between 11:30pm and 4am. He sleeps on the bed with me, so every time it wakes me and I snap into action. The 3 times they happened in day hours: one I was at work in 2001 and he had it on the webcam my website runs. I figured what happened and ran straight home. The next time was while I was traveling and he had it in front of my girlfriend. The last time was middle of the day while I was at work. Beyond that there is no visible clue to one coming, though I seem to be able to sense them 48 to 5 hours before they happen. Not sure how I usually know since it is not a behavior change in him I can put my finger on.
Mary: Hi! I’ll respond soon to your email I have just been slammed this week again between work, sales and consulting and finalizing my tax return (I HATE tax day in the USA)
Puggy1975 Zoe: Yes, Leo is a lot better now, thank you for asking.
YogiDot: I suspect that by the time you reach this part of my post you surmised Leo is fine now.
He is on Phenobarb and has been on it since 1999. The level he is on keeps the grand-mals down to once every 2 to 3 months now, though he tends to have clusters when it happens. Lowering the phenobarb levels only causes far more frequent grand-mals and upping the dose does not seem to push them more than every 3 months but also just wipes him out.
On your points: Noise… Since they happen at night 99.9% of the time, I do not believe it could be more quiet or darker.
Touching: I would not put my fingers near his mouth or attempt to hold him down, but placing my hand on his side and quietly talking to him is something I believe allows him to know I am there. He could not be more cushioned as he sleeps in a 14 inch diameter cup with 6 inch walls. He is quit snug in there and loves his bed. We do have several as after a seizure they require washing.
Recovery: Leo has a lot more wrong than just the seizures. He was an abused kitten and also suffers some brain damage, balance issues and more. Trying to get him to take food when he is seizureless is challenge enough. He has a very hard time finding the food and getting it out of the bowl without often chewing on his cheek or lip.
He is very disoriented after for a while, and between each grand-mal when they cluster, but I have learned how to help him through this. Once he has the seizures (whether or not I call my vet into his office at 3am) I will stay up with him until he falls asleep again. Usually that means I stay up the rest of the night.
If I ever leave on a trip and am gone more than 48 hours, the likelihood of a grand-mal becomes 100%. It is strange. So if I go on a trip he comes now. He handles the air travel and new place far better than my not being around. I guess he is very bonded to me. Actually he is flying from here (Montana USA) to New Jersey next month with us. A 10 hour+ day from leaving our home to arrival at my moms door, but he is such a trooper, and he LOVES my mom’s home and being the only cat there.