Guest guest Posted July 26, 2008 Report Share Posted July 26, 2008 Welcome , As you have seen some of us have been here since the early years of 2000. I have been here since 2003, but some have been here since 2002 and many are new as you are. We are like family here, so you will fit right in and that is why it seems like we all know each other pretty well. Feel free to ask any questions or vent or laugh. We all need to release our stresses. When we all look back, we can see that the progression of LBD has been for sometime, we just didn't realize what we were seeing at the time in the beginning. Our LOs (Loved Ones) are good at covering up what is happening to them. Looking back for me in the very early beginning of LBD, I didn't realize that my husband's obsessive compulsive behaviors were stemming from him starting to be forgetful, but I hadn't noticed him being forgetful yet. He didn't trust himself and he knew he was becoming forgetful, so he had me check if the front door was locked over and over again or the windows were closed over and over. It was annoying and he hadn't been like that before and now looking back on it, I understand where that was coming from. He would practice writing notes all over the margins of the newspaper. He told me he was leaving love notes to me, but it was really him noticing that his handwriting was getting smaller and smaller and harder for him to write. , our LOs are so different in their abilities. There are no stages with LBD, we call them phases, because there is no pattern. Some LOs may show symptoms in the earlier phases that others show in the later phases. LBD is a spectrum of many different variations http://www.lbda.org/category/3437 & cfid=367606 & cftoken=83169841/what-is-lbd.htm All have similar symptoms. PDD is Parkinson's Disease Dementia, which is LBD also and that is what my husband has. He was dx with Parkinson's first and several years later LBD appeared. DLB is where dementia appears first and Parkinson's may or may not appear in a year or two following the dementia. LBD showed up in my husband in 2000, but it was not clinically diagnosed until 2003, mostly because most doctors had not heard of it. It is getting better, but there are still doctors not knowledgable about LBD. My husband is in a nh and has been for a little over 2 years. He lost his ability to walk with a walker when he went into the nh, once they no longer are active on their feet, they lose the ability to walk or stand, but I noticed this early and requested that my husband maintain his weight bearing and I have done resistant exercises with him pushing against my hands with his feet and helping him do range of motion with his legs while laying on the bed and using a hand massager to keep his leg muscles stimulated, so he can keep the weight bearing up. I have asked the CNAs to stand him up and put him to bed and not lift him to bed. He can hold onto a stable object like a handicap bar and pull himself up to a stand and pivot around to sit on a toilet or I can wheel him up to the car and he can hold onto the car and pull to a stand and get in the car for a ride. He has done well at maintaining his weight bearing. If he did not have this I could not get him in a car or take him out. There are some here that are bedridden too. If my husband is hospitalized for 3 days or more, he loses his muscle tone, so I have to exercise his legs and get them back to where they were, so he can maintain weight bearing. They can lose the ability to use their legs really fast, so that is how I keep my husband able to stand with weight bearing and how I can take him places, but he is not mobile to move about on his own. If I didn't keep the leg exercises up, he would be bedridden. On this site, you are important to us also. Please make sure you get respite and take care of yourself. Do you have help with your husband? Do you have a Durable Power of Attorney for your husband. These things are a must! Take Care...................Jan New to this list Hello everyone. I have just found this list, and hope to find some answers amongst the wealth you must all have. I have read almost everything I can find on the net about DLB, and I've read some of your messgaes. You all seem to know each other pretty well, so please have a little patience with me. My 70 yr. old husband has recently been diagnosed, although retrospect makes me think he has had it for some time. We seem to be on a plateau of almost normality at the moment, although he is bedridden, and I cannot manage to give him a shower or bath on my own, he just cannot sustain his weight, and his shuffle is almost unmanageable. We do have a hospital type bed, and this is a great boon. I am able to ensure that he remains upright except when he is sleeping, when I lower it a little. I've read so much about sufferers being able to be dressed, and move about their homes, even attending functions of one kind or another, but this is so far removed from what my husband is able to do. Are there people out there who are also bedridden? If not, how did you manage to get them mobile? elizabeth ------------------------------------ Welcome to LBDcaregivers. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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