Are they sure it's Lyme's disease??? It says that neurological disorders from Lyme's are rare.

Maybe the vets haven't looked closely enough at her, and just assume it's Lymes.

This is from a canine epilepsy site, about seizures, saying that they are not all epilepsy related, but have other major causes...

Here's the link as well...
http://www.canine-epilepsy.com/Why.html

A dog may seizure for any number of reasons. Just because a dog has a seizure does not mean that the dog has epilepsy. Just because I have a running nose does not mean that I have a cold. I could have a reaction to someone's perfume, I could have a sinus infection, I could have allergies, I could have ... . There are many tests to determine what exactly I have that is causing my running nose. However, there is no test in the medical industry for the existence of epilepsy (primary, inherited or idiopathic). To determine whether a dog has epilepsy or something else, a veterinarian or neurologist arrives at their diagnosis by a process of elimination. They determine what is not and then, hopefully, come to a logical conclusion as to what it is. The following is a list of conditions which can cause seizures in dogs. Each condition is discussed in the following sections:



* 1. Brain tumor, Head injury
* 2. Lyme Disease and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
* 3. Distemper
* 4. Environment - toxins
* 5. Epilepsy
* 6. hyper' and 'hypo' Conditions
Hypoglycemia
Hypocalcemia
Hypoxia or Hypoxemia
Hepatic Encephalopathy or Liver Disease
Renal (kidney) disease
Hyperkalemia
Hyperlipoproteinemia
Gastrointestinal disease ("garbage" poisoning)
Tick Bites
Toxoplamosis (Toxo)
* 7. Lissencephay


The above list is not all-encompassing, but close, these items are the major causes for seizures in dogs.