Guest guest Posted February 1, 2006 Report Share Posted February 1, 2006 (I posted this as a reply to a posted message yesterday - and I see some of my posts were finally displayed - but not all that I did - so just posting again to allow you all to hear what happened... This is the 3rd one = starting a new post this time = I know 3-4 of my posts finally went through all at the same time, but don't know which of them worked, which of them didn't. Note to self = this one is a NEW post. I'm dying to let you all know what happened...) In a nutshell - the neurologist diagnosed Cerebral Vasculitis vs. Lewy Body Dementia, Depression, and Akathisia. So as you recall her last diagnosis was Vascular Dementia or Binswenger's Disease - so now it's the above. He said that I did a great job with my research for LBD (thanks to you all). He hadn't known about my mother's visual hallucinations - so now that he knows this he thinks the LBD is quite possible. He wants to do a Brain Biopsy - b/c he suspects the possibility of Cerebral Vasculitis. (http://vasculitis.med.jhu.edu/typesof/cns.html) His concern is the " rapidly prominent white matter " " don't know what the white matter is " and " what/why is there blood on the scan " (she also had a small amount of brain hemorrage) If it was Cerebral Vasculitis there's a possibility it can be treated. Treat the inflamation. Mom would be sedated and would stay overnight or for 2 days in the hospital. Make sure the brain biopsy includes the white matter. He did go ahead and prescribe some meds - Celexa (10 mg daily for one week, then 20 mg daily); Requip (0.25 mg tid (titrates up over one week) then 0.5 mg tid; and Memantine (5 mg daily, 1-10 mg daily over 4 weeks) I asked him if my mother possibly suffered from NMS from the Resperidone. It didn't brush that off - that it was possible. It's definitely not alzheimers though - he's 90% sure it's not AD. And that spinal tap wasn't a waste b/c he was able to determine that there were no abnormalities in the spinal tap. He confirmed that my mother is still the medical mystery (not in those words) - that he and his colleagues are stumped. That's why he wants to do this brain biopsy. We'll see. Discussed with the family - and we'll move ahead with the brain biopsy... I figured that I'd feel more guilty if it was a treatable disease and we didn't do something, than if something should happen and we find out it wasn't. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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