My husband and I are desperate to find assistance in treating our dog, Jack, who has epilepsy. We adopted this pup, who got a bad start in life. Read about Jack’s story after the jump. First, here’s Jack…
Alan and I are falling apart over our dog, Jack’s epilepsy. We have exhausted all of our finances over emergency vet hospital visits during the night and do not know where to turn for help to save him.
We got Jack from a stranger in the Shop-Rite parking lot (two and a half years ago) on the way to Costco. We stopped there at the spur of the moment (when we never had gone there before for grocery shopping). The man had two Shih-tzu’s and said that he was looking for a good home for one of them. We thought that he was joking, but it turns out that he was serious. We got Jack when he was less than 8 months old. It later surfaced (from this man) that prior to us adopting Jack, the man had sold him to a woman, who he then found out beat him (even broke his tail) and more than likely, inflicted head trauma to him as well.
On December 28, 2008, Jack turned three. On January 2, 2009, Jack began having seizures. The doctors say that it can be genetic, but it can also be a delayed reaction to head trauma. He began by taking Potassium Bromide, but the seizures got worse, fast and furiously. The vet then added Phenobarbital, but still, Jack’s seizures are not under control.
We are out of money to keep searching for a vet who will treat Jack at little or no expense, just because they really care about animals, and not just there to see how much money they can earn while trying to get the right mix of meds.
Readers, if you have any ideas, share them.
Betsy
Here’s Jack again…

Alan and I are falling apart over our dog, Jack’s epilepsy. We have exhausted all of our finances over emergency vet hospital visits during the night and do not know where to turn for help to save him.
We got Jack from a stranger in the Shop-Rite parking lot (two and a half years ago) on the way to Costco. We stopped there at the spur of the moment (when we never had gone there before for grocery shopping). The man had two Shih-tzu’s and said that he was looking for a good home for one of them. We thought that he was joking, but it turns out that he was serious. We got Jack when he was less than 8 months old. It later surfaced (from this man) that prior to us adopting Jack, the man had sold him to a woman, who he then found out beat him (even broke his tail) and more than likely, inflicted head trauma to him as well.
On December 28, 2008, Jack turned three. On January 2, 2009, Jack began having seizures. The doctors say that it can be genetic, but it can also be a delayed reaction to head trauma. He began by taking Potassium Bromide, but the seizures got worse, fast and furiously. The vet then added Phenobarbital, but still, Jack’s seizures are not under control.
We are out of money to keep searching for a vet who will treat Jack at little or no expense, just because they really care about animals, and not just there to see how much money they can earn while trying to get the right mix of meds.
Readers, if you have any ideas, share them.
Betsy
Here’s Jack again…
