Follow
Share

My dad died in July following a short battle with cancer. When he was taken into hospital in May, my mum (89yrs) collapsed whilst I was with her and was taken into same hospital with a suspected stroke (turned out to be UTI). They went to the same NHome in June and when he passed in July, mum struggled with accepting his death. Mum has improved since, she used to lose things/wandering to a room where she said the man was Dad/getting muddled with rooms that are identical and wanting to take me to this other room. Now she rings me in the evening to tell me quite crossly to come out of the room next door to hers because she can hear me in there and not to get involved with the man in that room! She thinks I am in trouble with the police and that she's really worried about me. I reassure her I am at my home safe and sound. During the day she is frail but quite reasonable and even talks about this evening behavior thinking it is strange. I think it may be sundowning and the Dr. is arranging an appt with the memory clinic. The man next door was not too happy when she walked in on him unannounced! Has anyone experienced this and did it improve with medication?

Thank you for your reply. I think you are right, it could be a combination of things. :)
Helpful Answer (0)
Reply to NannySue
Report

Nannysue, I mostly want to say , this goes to show you , we never stop worrying about are children.

I live across from are town fire house, when my kids lived near buy, I would text them to make sure the were ok, Everytime the trucks went out.

We never stop worrying about are kids, it's very sweet

I'm don't have a lot of medical knowledge, so others will answer this better.

But UTIs do cause worsining dementia, usually temporary.
Helpful Answer (0)
Reply to Anxietynacy
Report
NannySue 5 hours ago
Thank you. It is nice to know she worries about me, but I just can't convince her I'm OK. Today was better though, I mentioned to her the Dr is going to see if we can do anything about her anxiety and she seemed to accept this. Thank you for replying :)
(0)
Report
Make sure the discussion with her doctor includes talking about meds for anxiety/depression/agitation, and to maybe retest her for the UTI, just to be safe. Elderly women get lots of UTIs due to changes in physiology and pH, not drinking enough water, etc.
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to Geaton777
Report

Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter