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Gabapentin is a medication for the treatment of seizures, pain and anxiety in dogs and cats. Seizures are more common in dogs than cats and can happen for various reasons—the most common for dogs being Idiopathic epilepsy, an inherited disorder. Other causes of seizures can include health issues like liver disease, so you should consult your veterinarian for diagnosis and treatment. They can walk you through medicinal options and can prescribe the correct gabapentin dosage for dogs. You should only use medication that is made for your type of pet and with the authorization of your vet.
In the class of drugs called anticonvulsants—which are mainly prescribed and used to treat seizures—gabapentin has other uses, too. Your veterinarian may also prescribe gabapentin for your cat’s anxiety. The gabapentin for cats' dosage is different from gabapentin for dogs, so use only what your vet prescribes to your individual pets. Gabapentin for dogs’ anxiety is the same drug, but dosages will be different depending on weight, severity and other factors. Gabapentin for cats and gabapentin for dogs is also prescribed to help relieve chronic pain. If your cat or dog has arthritis—for instance—gabapentin may help. You can also use gabapentin for your dog’s pain associated with malignancy or many forms of chronic pain.
Everything you should know to help your dog relieve chronic pain, anxiety, epilepsy & seizures. Gabapentin helps your dog to feel better again.
Updated on October 29th, 2025
Everything you should know to help your cat relieve chronic pain, anxiety, epilepsy & seizures. Gabapentin helps your dog to feel better again.
Updated on October 29th, 2025
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That is a very high dose if given all at once, it is 1.5 times the maximum recommended dose. 800mg spread out through 3 or 4 doses would be good. If your pet is in pain, gabapentin may not be enough. You should discuss a multi-modal pain protocol with your vet, often adding in steroids, NSAIDs, opioids, acupuncture, laser therapy, etc will be better than a single medication.
Updated on August 12th, 2025
Yes, it is safe to give gabapentin with Metacam and the joint supplement. Gabapentin is a drug that affects the nerves in the brain that are involved with the pain response. It can take up to three weeks before the body is used to the gabapentin and is not affected by drowsiness. The drowsiness is not something you have to worry about, it will go away. Be patient, it will take at least a week , up to three weeks.
Updated on August 12th, 2025
It may be that you’re just feeding too much or haven’t given the diet enough time. Start with the guideline on the bag and re-weigh in a month. If no changes, decrease each feeding by about 25%. Weigh in a month. Continue until you hit his ideal weight, then go up slightly to stop the loss and start maintaining. Weight loss is definitely crucial for managing arthritis so good work in that department. That dose of gabapentin is safe for him (and in fact what I might prescribe to him if you came to my clinic). However, it works much better when given consistently so do get a prescription just for Teddy from you vet. He or she will also want to make sure it’s nothing else serious going on like a fracture, fungal disease, or cancer. My other “go-to’s” for arthritis are high dose omega 3 fatty acids (about 1000mg fish oil daily) and a glucosamine chondroitin supplement. Talk with you vet as there are dozens of other options as well including Adequan, cold laser therapy, stem cell t
Updated on August 12th, 2025
If this was prescribed by your vet , then this is the amount of medicine he needs. Gabapentin may make him a bit drowsy in the beginning, but that should subside after about two weeks. Gabapentin is against nerve pain. Tramadol is an opioid which takes some pain as well and Metacam is a non-steroidal antiinflammatory which takes away inflammation and therefore also pain. These medicines are safe, however watch your dog's poo in the first two weeks. If it is black or tarry then stop the Metacam and inform your vet.
Updated on August 12th, 2025
Hello. Thank you for using Boop by Petco. Gabapentin may be given with or without food so it doesn't matter that she is NPO. If you normally hide the medication in food you would need to give her the medication by placing the pill directly down her throat. If you don't know how to do this here is a video tutorial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZN5Iil1hCAg So, I would give the Gabapentin tonight but not tomorrow morning as during the surgery the vet will likely give a narcotic (like morphine). Gabapentin can interfere with the efficacy of the narcotics. Hope this helps. Best wishes.
Updated on August 12th, 2025