My mom literally was diagnosed with dementia three days ago so I am trolling the web for information. Her next neurologist appointment is in three days, where the doctor plans to begin treatment with alzh medicaton.
Between now and then I get the unenviable task of breaking the news of the diagnosis to her. Three months ago mom suffered a moderate ischemic stroke on the left side of her brain, verified by cat scan. At that time he said he also suspected the onset of dementia, based on the cat scan and wanted more testing. The Neurologist scheduled an EEG and determined the presence of dementia on the left brain ( the right side too unreliable to read due to the stroke damage) all this is relative greek to me but he seems on the up and up.
Has any one else here seen this progression of dementia following a stroke?
My mom has always been a hand full to say the least, she is 79 now. But her behavior in the last two months has gotten out of character. She lives alone in a senior living apartment building and I check on her daily but she calls me nonstop all day (and night too at times).
Mom has gotten stronger as she recovered from the stroke and is mobile with a walker but the confusion, trouble with words, and mild visions at night (sometimes) has not improved at all ! Her hand writing, which at one time was very nice is awful now.
Mom has been a bit on the paranoid side her entire life but she can be downright nasty about it now. I let this slide as i realize its driven by fear.
I'll be checking this page often in the future, I just needed to write this down some where and get it off my chest.
thanks
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Took Mom back to the neuro two days ago and he backed off on wanting to issue meds ( this confused me ). He says the EEG for left side scored a 7 and he prefers to wait until it is in the 3-5 range before. The reight side data was too corrupted due to the stroke to be reliable( ????). So now he wants to do a second cat scan in July as he thinks this will give him two data points to draw from.
Sooooo, the you have dementia talk i gave mom was counter acted by the doctors wait and see approach.(mom says she was cured by a miracle over night... too funny)
Now I'll try to answer some of your inquiries.
Why did i tell her about the diagnosis? - because i thought it was the right thing to do. If it was me I'd want to know.
Moms diet? - it sucks... she is a carb and sugar junkie and drinks hot tea all day (caffine)
Ignoring the nasty comments - I've had decades of practice. I swear mom is a border line paranoid/ schizophrenic. New people who meet her think she is wonderful and so loving, once they see both side of her they distance themselves from her. The mom blames that on me or my sister because we supposedly gossiped about her. The the nastiness begins.... sad actually. Mom sees herself in competition for attention with the entire world.
Networking / support - my sister helps some but is undependable. I get overwhelmed. My wife is my rock! ( or a bitch whore if you listen to mom).
Thanks for all of your answers. I will post back here later. its a bad night already, my phone has been exploding the entire time I have been typing. MOM again...
With dementia the description "long goodbye" is unfortunately very true. We grieve a little every time we are with my mom. As to how to cope, try to get good support. My sister and I share everything and my husband is a compassionate listener. This has helped greatly.
People with dementia become like children except that they know fear. And it is very frightening what they are going through! So try to understand why she may be doing things, like calling you often. Comfort your mom and make her feel secure.
But, also, don’t let the diagnosis take over your life (although that is hard to do). Don’t obsess with trying to maintain things exactly as before (her eating, cleaning habits, etc). Things are going to change. Don’t sweat the small stuff, which there will be plenty of. Get help for the home/health care issues and try not to do it all yourself.
That brings me to my most important advice: Spend as much time as you can "enjoying" your mom. Spend time together. Reminisce, play music she enjoys, do little projects together, let her help you do chores (even if you have to redo anything she did later). Make her feel normal and secure. Just enjoy your precious time together.
First thing is you will find a ton of information right on this web site. You may want to contact the Alzheimer's association in your area for information. Telling her she has dementia would probably lead to more distress. I have been the caregiver for my wife for the last six years. She would be classified about stage 5-6 on a scale of seven. Eventually your mother will have to have more assistance. The longer you can keep her mobile the longer you will delay the final stages of the disease. As the disease progresses, do not take anything personally if she insults you or upsets you in any way. That is the disease speaking. If you become her caregiver, make sure you have a support system in place before you begin. You will need respite care for yourself. Not know much more about your situation I can't say too much more except join a caregiver's support group if there is one in your area.
Good Luck!!!
Please set the rules of engagement yourself. She cannot do it and it would be all about HER and to hell with you. Doesn't hurt to be proactive.
Gather all assistance you can, from family, government, caregivers, etc.
Do the best you can to see to her care--but that does not mean doing it all by yourself until you can't remember who you are or what your life was like.
Listen to your instinct/ intuition and do not deny your ability to reason and stick to your guns about your boundaries.
Get plenty of sleep, water, exercise, venting, personal time that is not encroached upon by mother. Try not to get resentful or sarcastic with siblings who don't get it. Some do and some never will. Every dog has his day. Mark my words.
It can be healing and a good lesson for your growth, if you believe in that aspect.
If your situation turns out to be even 10% more positive than this warning: Congratulations!
God Bless you, and your family. Take care;) xo
This website is also a great asset to you. You will learn a lot from these wonderful people who know exactly what you are going through...you are not alone. But please add to the conversations...because it's therapy ...and you will need it. Plus someone else might be able to use your experience to their benefit. I know...benefit you say? Wow..sorry there is not benefits from your loved one with dementia...but the more you understand this horrible disease the better equipped you will be. If you have the time..I encourage all of you to google "Teepa Snow" she is an experience nurse in this field and gave me much needed insite to the whole journey of dementia/alz.. Coping, managing, and respite...take care of yourself..because you will need it. Find help where you can. I wish there was a magic wand that can make all this disappear....but there isn't..do what you can. That's all you can do...God Bless you for being there for them. Good luck.
My MIL knows about her illness but we try to always tell and show her that we are here to help. A regular structure, routine eases the fear on their part. Things do trigger, so watch for those and try to minimize. I watched the Teepa Snow videos to really know how to be a better caregiver. That was probably my biggest mistake the first 6months. I didn't understand her issues enough to know how to respond.
The doctors do a wonderful job, however, be proactive with your mother's medication. Monitor and know what she's taking. It doesn't always help.
Keep talking with us, it helps. We know what you're journey is about to be. It's hard but you have ears here.
I wish, my husband had not heard the diagnosis, because from that day on he quit trying to regain what he lost - he gave up. No matter how hard I tried to convince him, that doctors don't know everything and he had beaten the odds with his heart problems, it did not work. If I could turn back the clock, I would make sure my husband was out of earshot when the doctor told us.
I wish you the best, will keep you and your Mom in my prayers. As others have said, come to this site often. It will help you to cope and you can vent - we all have been there and understand.
Along with Alz., my husband also has a Meningioma so we are with Hospice now. No diagnostic biopsy, chemo or surgery, as none of those will enhance his quality of life at his age - 86. It is so difficult to watch a loved one to lose their abilities to shave, get undressed and dressed, wanting to see his parents, wonders who I am sometimes, can't let me out of his sight, walks with a shuffle and many times needs a chair ride instead of walking. Basically can not do anything for himself except feeding and his continence, and for that I Praise The Lord!!! every time he needs to go. Has never had any accidents, we use the mens pullup Depends underwear if we're going out for a period of time also at bedtime if he seems more confused, and he has accepted that willingly. This season in our life is not an easy one, but we will take it "one day at a time" and let the Lord take care us and be grateful for every day we have together. We both lost our first spouses to health problems - I was 31 with 4 young children; he was 43 with 2 teenage boys and now we have the "blended family" with "our" son who lives with us to help me with his Dad. Along with Hospice who comes to bath him 3 times a week, a couple of volunteers who come twice a week and Meals on Wheels for him, we feel blessed to also have our children who are supportive in so many other ways. Know you are not facing this alone with your Mom; my prayers are with you and your family as you go forward on this new adventure - it is an adventure you know, because you'll never know to expect or what will happen next. Loves and Hugs.
I only "remind" Mom when it comes to a safety issue. Good luck and God Bless. My BEST advise would be to save this site and come here as often as you can. It is a life saver....literally. The support, knowledge, experiences and laughter these wonderful ppl share every day has kept me from blowing my brains out.
God bless you in your upcoming journey. Know that you are not alone, and try to see the small blessings with your mom even on the worst of days.
This site is fantastic to vent fears and terrors. Is good. My wife was diagnosed Alz this last feb. we had a preliminar diagnose of cognitive syndrome moderate about 3 y.a. and I began to observe her vey carefully. Steadelly she was having gaps of memory, soft. socially most of the times was not noticeable.Since during the last 6-8 months it began to be noticeable. Some family members very carefully mentioned it. As to warn me of something maybe wrong,
At the end of the year I was decided to define the condition, and in february it was confirmed as Alz. both clinically and neuro-psychological. Definitive.
Even if I had a strong indication, it was a shock, for weeks and weeks I cried and studied alone. And began taking care of us.
We are sort of alone, we live in a country diferent from mine, hers. That was an arrangemente we decided at marrying almost 40 years ago. She has a sister, living in the same building, that has opted for not being very close. I supuse is out of fear, fear of haqving the same, fear of having to have unwanted responsabilities. Anyhow, I feel alone.
The first thing I did was to select our closest friends and family and tell them via Net, of the situation. Some had disapiered others had being marvelous and are giving us support. But... there is a great but... for how long? They I am sure won´t be close for years, most will disapear. I believe we have to develop new circles, more appropiate.
Another topic debated is about tell them or not. In Alz, is useless, they will forget almost inmediatly, my wife when reading something about asks and gets anguished. For a shorto period. What is the use of having had them several moments os anguish. I have opted for the angle way, to deviate the topic, or mentioning somethig else. And she changes. For my wife works better. In this site I am reading some letters from a med. who has a diagnosed moderate Alz. he understand and comprehends. Is his profesion. Is diferent from my wife. I won´t tell her more.
Information: There are many authors, among them I would recomend Dr Kübler-Ross, at least some of her proposals are dsequate, but they are more to a situation of grieving and death. In another author. Dr, Pauline Boss, I founded very solid bases for our sad situation, she proposes an ambiguous grieve. More suitable to our problem in which the mind is going and going, but the body is here. Present. The person is present, but the mind is desapearing, and is not the person anymore.
Hope this servs you and send you my moral support and prayers
Fast forward 6 years and they now say she does not have AD but she did have a brain stem stroke. Over the last , I would say, 5 years she has steadily declined physically but her memory was good up until just this year. ( have just started noticing some memory issues but not too bad). She cannot write anymore- that was one of the first things to go and she cannot read very well now. As of , um, 2 years ,maybe. Her eyes are OK - it is the message the brain is getting, I think, that is messed up. She is wheel chair bound now but can walk just a bit with extreme support. Balance was one of her first issues. She has trouble talking- whispers and she chokes on liquids- in the last year. The doctor just told her yesterday that she will regress more rapidly than a typical person her age because of the damage to her brain stem. She is often dizzy and says she feels drunk. She is on blood thinners and cholesterol meds for the stroke.
I don't think her personality has changed all that much. Not like a person with AD. I think she is still very much her natural self just fractured.
I am not a full time caregiver to her. My Dad is but I try and give him breaks. He is not a natural caregiver and loses patience with her. And she is OCD- but always has been just worse now that she is not active. It can be very frustrating. So my husband says (I have it too ;0)
No,really, my Mom gets things in her head that "have to be done' and will not let up until it is done. She also seems to have an absolute desire to keep my Dad from sitting down. I have been there and he will have finished a task she wanted done (feed the dog, say) and his butt is an inch from the recliner and she starts up again.--"feed the cat" and he will yell-'WHY DIDN'T YOU SAY THAT WHEN I WAS UP???" it is a circus! I swear she does it on purpose!!
So that is my Mom's story.
Blessings to you and your Mom!! Come back and keep us updated or just to say help or vent.
We were surprised most that she could be so different from one day to the next. She would do entirely different things - all the time.
For my husband the biggest struggle was learning to not try rationalizing with her. He would explain stuff to her a lot, like how to work her cell phone. He learned when she went off on a tangent that distracting works best. Some people can't be distracted - yikes- I feel for their families.
Best of luck, we found out in January of 2012. Hard to know what to do at first. My MIL just enjoys my chattering. Any topic will do, she seems to enjoy the energy.
A QUESTION: What purpose is served in telling your mother about the
diagnosis?
I've never had that conversation with my mother and don't intend to. Why upset her and yourself? When Mom expresses concern about her memory failing, I just reassure her it's all right, no harm done, and besides that's what she keeps me around for, to fill in the gaps. This always makes her smile and by that time her mind has moved on to something else.
Good luck!
The days ahead can be very blessed...but it is also heartbreaking to see them struggle with the day to day life needs....being very real...you will cry a lot..you will laugh a lot...emotions will be like a long roller coaster ride that never ends...the family will find reasons not to help...(or so goes mine).... I keep a journal that helps me vent, keep up with things and remember all the blessings mom still brings even now...it is not easy..but with lots of prayer, patience and love you will get through will great grace....try to enjoy the journey...as much as you can...will say a prayer for you....blessings to your Mother and you.