Other symptoms include loss of appetite, vomiting, irritability, continuous crying (in infants), and seizures.
Severe hypoglycemia may cause loss of consciousness, seizures, or death.
The symptoms of Batten disease usually become apparent between 5 and 15 years of age when progressive loss of vision, seizures, and progressive neurological degeneration develop.
The symptoms are depression/lethargy, confusion/dizziness, loss of excretory/bladder control, vomiting, and then loss of consciousness and/or seizures.
Low blood sugar can result in a loss of coordination, depression, collapse and seizures in as little as 30 minutes.
Characteristic findings include loss of speech and motor skills, deceleration of head growth, stereotypic hand movements, seizures, respiratory abnormalities, scoliosis and growth delay.
It causes loss of muscle control, convulsive seizures, respiratory paralysis, and almost certain death.
Severe low blood sugar may cause loss of consciousness and seizures.
In children, excitement may occur first, and may be followed by loss of coordination, drowsiness, loss of consciousness, and seizures.
On occasions when E. cuniculi do reach nervous tissue, rabbits can experience neurological impairment, characterized by partial or complete paralysis, loss of coordination, seizures, and head tilting.