My mom has kindly refused formal testing in the past. Yesterday she cooperated and participated in the Mini Mental State Examination test with her doctor. I knew we were probably heading towards severe dementia but was not expecting her to score a 2! I'm struggling with how - and what - to tell her siblings and friends. I've been keeping them updated on her current status, but the doctors wouldn't provide me any guidance on what to expect - and possibly when. I understand each patient is different...but a score of 2! I just need some kind of guidance.
Is your question about what to tell people or how fast this will progress or both?
I would tell people exactly as much as you know. It must be obvious to folks that mom has some issues. As my dads dementia got worse I had a bit of a struggle getting other people to not try and correct him, quit playing DONT YOU REMEMBER, or try to convince him of something.
Those folks who are regularly around people with dementia need to have a basic understanding of the illness. And you certainly can’t have anyone trying to convince mom that she HAS dementia.
I can only speak to my experience with my dad. He always refused any testing. We finally decided it wasn’t worth the battle. His primary doc said he had classic ALZ symptoms. I noticed changes in him about 7 years ago. At first I thought it was just old age but it soon became clear there was more going on. Short term memory was failing, his ability to reason about simple things was reduced. It was so long and gradual.
Dad went into assisted living just last month and is pretty much just in the moment now. He’s on a small dose of Ativan, there’s been some agitation but he’s usually good natured and easy to divert. But he’s still pretty healthy and agile at 87 yrs old. He keeps the staff on their toes!
My mom had really top notch testing over several years at a Univ Health Science Center with full Gerontology Dept & geriatric psych Dept too. Teaching Hospital situation. Multiple MMSEs done. 1 time was way off due to it not being done bilingual which was done all the other times. The test doesn’t have to be totally done in another language but more the keystone words do.... so like “Here is a “yellow pencil” is said and then “Here is a lapiz Amarillo” or ”Aqui esta un lapiz amarillo” is repeated. Bilingual code-switching just on key words is ok. They can recall just fine in their childhood language but English is a bust. The older my mom got the more her memory was Spanish language oriented & surprisingly some German too as she grew up in a very settled by Germans area. This was a woman who spoke English like 95% of the time & only Spanish when family came over from the old country to visit or she visited them. She was determined via testing and physical notations (the flat footed shuffle) to have overall characteristics of Lewy Body Dementia & it was good to know as some drugs better for a Lewy (excelon) and some psych drugs are to be totally avoided.
If language issues could be your moms situation, she needs to get it repeated.
Not dementia but one of the aphasias.
There is a risk of misdiagnosing aphasia as dementia with Folstein. “Is Folstein mini an aphasia test?”, Article, Author: Vigliecca. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.
There is a documentary I'd like to share that you may find helpful on TVO (an Ontario public television station) called Much Too Young
tvo.org/video/documentaries/much-too-young-feature-version
Even though you are living it you may find comfort and inspiration in knowing that others are sharing your journey.
If you knew there was dementia, but didn't think it was severe, I would be concerned about a score that low. To me it would indicate some other underlying issue such as a urinary tract infection, dehydration or severe anxiety/depression. I would not take the doctor's "do nothing" approach at face value. I would ask them to look for an underlying cause, do blood work, a urinalysis and have her see psychiatrist.
You can also print out the test an administer it yourself to see what the issue might be. She might be way more relaxed with you asking her the questions than with a doctor. Just be sure not to help with the answers. This way you get a better idea of what specifically she is having the most trouble with. I have been to the tests with my mom and she always has issues remembering the three words a few minutes later and cannot do the subtraction from 100. She also has trouble with the town and county, but since she doesn't know where the doctor is located and isn't driving, I don't really get bothered by her not getting points for that. She also is never sure what floor we are on, but at the doctor's office we go to, we take an elevator to the 2nd floor, but the elevator is the parking lot, so when you push the button it says 1. If she says either first or second floor, they give it to her.
And in this case - do we ever! 2? Impressive! But sadly not in a good way.
It's just flitting across my mind that Mohammed Ali, may his memory be for a blessing, scored virtually undetectably on IQ tests (decades before his later difficulties set in). Nothing wrong with his IQ. It was about his absolute lack of interest in, and his opposition to the basis of, the tests.
My mother declined to answer "trivial" questions. I think she might have found some of them an effort, and indeed been unable to answer some. But instead she preferred to reject them altogether.
So how much is won't, how much is can't, how much is just not able or willing to pay attention in the first place, and join any necessary thought processes into a coherent chain?
Given that MW's mother is still socialising so well, and functioning in many ways, although undoubtedly there is something going on it doesn't seem to fit the obvious things that would produce *this* low a score.
I think I'd do two things.
1. Ask what further investigations might be useful.
2. Celebrate how much of life she is clearly continuing to enjoy. You can't have too many friends or too much music :)
Three things.
3. Take deep breaths. This needn't be the end of the world.
We definitely need to remember what other posters have pointed out, the MMSE and others like it are only the first step, not a diagnosis.
Ask the doctor for a detailed breakdown of what she couldn't do.
Oo.
Theatre? Cinema?
But it was eight hours ago that I read the list! How long before it's okay to forget what the words were? :/
As others have suggested there is no actual way of making a prognosis for any dementia. However getting a definite diagnosis will make getting any treatment possible.
I think the idea of doing the test yourself under calm conditions would also be a good idea. At least it would give you a better idea of what is going on.
I used to administer this to people for applications for Long Term care Insurance. Most people scored well enough on the tests and when there was a failure it was very bad. I remember two, one was an elderly lady who without the testing clearly was not competent although her son was furious when her application was refused. The other was a man who when asked to read something totally lost his temper and ordered me out of the house. I think he was illiterate. Another was a man who admitted that he could not read or write. That was fine because I was allowed to read the questions to him.
Enjoy the time you have left with your Mom and let the "what ifs" take care of themselves.
Hopefully your Mom will agree to a more thorough exam to determine her status more clearly.
My husband's MMSE score bounced all over the place. He was in a study, so he took it at least once a year. I don't think it was ever 2, but it went from the teens to 28. He had Lewy Body Dementia. It is characteristic of that disease to have fluctuating cognition. The varying scores were just evidence they had the diagnosis right! A score much lower than last year did not mean he was much worse than last year -- discussion of symptoms was more useful as a measure -- it just meant he tested at a low point in his up-and-down cognition.
It sounds like your mom is doing reasonably well in her interactions with visitors. If she isn't drastically worse than she has been recently, I'd not be overly worried about the test score.
(My mother could pass all kinds of tests, well into her dementia. The tests just give clues, not a diagnosis.)
Instead, it's probably better for you to familiarize yourself (if you haven't done so already) with the way dementia usually progresses, and how most people die of the condition. (Sorry, this is sad to learn about, but it's still worth doing so you'll better understand what to expect.)
People vary and your mother might have a more unusual course (she's already on the young side).
But generally: in the early stage, people have difficulties with things that require more complicated brain processes, like driving, finances, judgment, organizing meals or trips, learning something new, making complicated decisions. They also often have difficulty with short-term memory. They may have difficulty saying certain things, or with visual-spatial processing. They usually are able walk and talk, although what they say doesn't always make sense.
In the middle stages, people start to lose their abilities to manage basic skills like continence, getting dressed, and they have more difficulties with walking. Also the type of mental processing activities they can do becomes more and more limited.
As they go from middle stage to late, they lose the ability to walk and make sentences and manage continence. They recognize even familiar people less and less, and eventually they forget how to put the fork or spoon in their mouth, so they have to be hand-fed. Eventually they lose the ability to sit up without support. As a geriatrician this is what I consider "severe/late-stage," but I have noticed that many people -- including many doctors -- will label someone severe just because their thinking and memory are very scrambled, even if they still are able to manage walking and talking.
If you google for the FAST stages of Alzheimer's, you will probably find this laid out. How long it takes for people to go through the stages is quite variable.
People will score very low on the mini-mental well before they reach late-stage, because to do those cognitive tests, you need to be able to understand the instructions, remember things, speak, and draw/write.
If your mom can call you on her iPhone and manage other tasks, she doesn't sound that severe to me. In terms of what to tell your friends and family, maybe focus on what she's able to do now and what she has trouble with.
Medical complications related to dementia are possible at any stage, but become most common when people are bedbound and have lost most of their mental abilities. In very advanced dementia people have basically lost all their mental abilities, but their bodies are well enough to keep living. Again, how long people last in this stage varies; some people live this way for a few years.
But that only lasts so long, and eventually people will start showing signs of illness related to end-stage dementia. These include repeated pneumonias (which may be related to swallowing difficulties), other recurrent infections, pressure sores that don't heal, weight loss, or fevers. A study found that when people with advanced dementia develop those signs, they had a 40-50% chance of dying within 6 months.
nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa0902234#t=article
So...I hope some of this information helps. Good luck w your mom and take care.
After reviewing the test, I’m not surprised as I know she wouldn’t be able to answer / complete with answers
That said the instrument is designed as a screening tool, and her low score suggests further evaluation is warranted. As other posters,have pointed out, too, the human mind is tough to quantify in any meaningful way, cognition is changeable, and the subjects attitude and interest in the testing process make a difference. More evaluation sounds like a good idea.