Guest guest Posted September 13, 2006 Report Share Posted September 13, 2006 Hi Kathy..Welcome!,this is a great group of people who care and are understanding,We all suffer with chronic pain and in that we know we arnt alone,God Bless fran Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2006 Report Share Posted September 13, 2006 Hi Kathy..Welcome!,this is a great group of people who care and are understanding,We all suffer with chronic pain and in that we know we arnt alone,God Bless fran Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2008 Report Share Posted August 27, 2008 Hi Kat, Welcome to the group of big hearts. I'm relatively new myself here and have learned a great deal in the short time. pearl New Member To: LBDcaregivers Date: Tuesday, August 26, 2008, 5:47 AM Hi All, I have kinda been observing how things work. Here is my intro: My Mom has been seeing a Neurologist since her hemmoraghic brain stem stroke in Feb '06. Zolpidem was given during her stay in rehab for a week after the stroke. She was misdiagnosed with side effects from medicines and low vision (which causes hallucinations) . She is also dealing with double vision and balance issues from the stroke. 20 months after the stroke, she had learned to walk and do the stairs both with assistance. At 86 years young, she told her Neurologist, " I'm an old lady now. I'm 86 you know. " Clonazepam was considered the wonder drug that helped control her anxiety and uncontrollable movements of her left leg allowing her to walk with little assistance. She has had care 24/7 since her stroke and thinks I hold her back by not allowing her to walk by herself, " And when are you going to let these girls (caregivers) go and leave me alone? " In 10/07 her complaint was a man singing in her head. He didn't have a bad voice. He just sang the same songs over and over. Neurologist started with Seroquel then switched to Zyprexa. Mom had problems walking on these meds and was trying to perform in rehab for her stroke in order to qualify for more rehab. I chose rehab over the singing in the head. At this time we could explain away the hallucinations. She had several bouts with pneumonia all cured at home with antibiotics. Levaquin was ruled a contributor to her drug induced hallucinations. A neuropsych eval in 2/08 showed lewy body disorder without dementia. Neurologist put her on Namenda in 4/08. She suggested a Geriatric Psychiatrist, who took her off Namenda and put her on Abilify and Exelon. No mention of the Clonazepam by the Psychiatrist. I worked to get the dosage up on the Clonazepam to help with the tremors in her left shoulder and uncontrollable kicking of her left leg which seemed to be getting stiffer and she complained that her foot was stuck on the floor (both stroke or so I thought). I then started the Abilify. I received a call at work that an ambulance had been called by daycare because my Mother was unresponsive. The Psychiatrist told me no way the Abilify would affect her walking. ER said she was over medicated. Hmmmm Stop Abilify; lower Clonazepam; call Psychiatrist. He pats me on the back. Now he says Clonazepam is not good for someone hallucinating. Thanks. Neurologist confirms I should follow the Psychiatrist now that she is diagnosed. Note to self: time to accept clinical diagnosis of LBD any more proof will come in symptoms...until death. Today she is on her second week without Clonazepam. I always hated that drug. It's not covered by any insurance. Look forward. Prozac, Abilify, Exelon are the mix of the moment. Kat Caregiver for Jane, Mother, 86, diagnosed 3/08 LBD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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