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Canine Epilepsy: An Underutilized Model
ILAR Journal, 2014The mainstay of comparative research for epilepsy has been rodent models of induced epilepsy. This rodent basic science is essential, but it does not always translate to similar results in people, likely because induced epilepsy is not always similar enough to naturally occurring epilepsy.
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In Practice, 2014
Canine idiopathic epilepsy has an estimated prevalence of 0.62 per cent in primary veterinary practice (Kearsley‐Fleet and others 2013) and as such is one of the most common chronic neurological diseases. Descriptions of ‘epilepsy of unknown origin… where no symptom characteristic of any other condition has as yet presented’ can be found in early ...
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Canine idiopathic epilepsy has an estimated prevalence of 0.62 per cent in primary veterinary practice (Kearsley‐Fleet and others 2013) and as such is one of the most common chronic neurological diseases. Descriptions of ‘epilepsy of unknown origin… where no symptom characteristic of any other condition has as yet presented’ can be found in early ...
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Deep-learning for seizure forecasting in canines with epilepsy
Journal of Neural Engineering, 2019Abstract Objective . This paper introduces a fully automated, subject-specific deep-learning convolutional neural network (CNN) system for forecasting seizures using ambulatory intracranial EEG (iEEG).
Petr Nejedly +9 more
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Canine epilepsy: integrating research in practice
Veterinary Record, 2013THE study by Kearsley-Fleet and others (2013), summarised on p 338 of this issue of Veterinary Record , examines the epidemiology of a large cohort of epileptic dogs obtained from first-opinion practice and provides useful information about the potential differences between cases seen in first- and second-opinion practice. Only 2.2 per cent of the dogs
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Comparative Clinical and Electroencephalographic Studies of Canine Epilepsy
Epilepsia, 1970SUMMARY Clinical and electroencephalographic observations of 70 epileptic dogs are reported. Sixty‐nine dogs underwent generalized motor seizures. Typically, these consisted of loss of consciousness, generalized tonic‐clonic convulsions, and autonomic signs (e.g. urination, salivation, or defecation).
T A, Holliday +2 more
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Neuropathology of canine epilepsy.
Problems in veterinary medicine, 1992Canine epilepsy can be classified into primary (idiopathic) and secondary (symptomatic) epilepsy, which is similar to human epilepsy. Primary epilepsy in both species is inherited and characterized by the absence of recognizable causative lesions. Secondary epilepsy is linked to a variety of lesions such as brain tumors, trauma, encephalitis, lysosomal
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Medium-chain triglycerides dietary supplement improves cognitive abilities in canine epilepsy
Epilepsy and Behavior, 2021Benjamin-Andreas Berk +2 more
exaly
Quantitative brain histogram of canine epilepsy using magnetic resonance imaging
Acta Radiologica, 2021Somkiat Huaijantug +2 more
exaly

