I would keep an eye on her and see if you can detect what may cause it. Or it may be epilepsy. My sheltie had only one seizure in her life. If my collie weren't on high amounts of phenobarb he'd have died by now I'm sure. Knowing what I know now I probably wouldn't take my dog to the vet after one seizure or even two if they were a long time apart. I doubt the vet could diagnose the real issue anyway after only two seizures. If your dog has another seizure that is a cluster seizure where there are several seizures one after the other that is an emergency and she has to go the vet. You had a good idea to call the vet.
When my collie has had seizures in the past I have held an ice pack on his lower back, just behind where the ribs end, as it is supposed to end the seizure more quickly and after the seizure I give him a spoon full of Hagen daz vanilla ice cream to get his blood sugar back up. The fat in the ice cream keeps the blood sugar from spiking.
I had my vet test his thyroid function and sure enough it was abnormal and I believe that contributed to the frequency of his seizures. Since we have had him on thyroid meds he has had one seizure in the past year.
When my collie has had seizures in the past I have held an ice pack on his lower back, just behind where the ribs end, as it is supposed to end the seizure more quickly and after the seizure I give him a spoon full of Hagen daz vanilla ice cream to get his blood sugar back up. The fat in the ice cream keeps the blood sugar from spiking.
I had my vet test his thyroid function and sure enough it was abnormal and I believe that contributed to the frequency of his seizures. Since we have had him on thyroid meds he has had one seizure in the past year.
