Guest guest Posted November 15, 2010 Report Share Posted November 15, 2010 Dorothy, Don't be discouraged. Wow!!! You're an inspiration to us. You are to be commended for caring for your mil and being so creative in your problem-solving. Foam pipe insulation to cushion the bedrails!! Brilliant!! I agree with you about the small doses of meds, especially the antipsychotics. When the neuro started Mom on 25 mg. of Seroquel, I cut that in half and we saw results as we increased the dosages in those tiny, 12.5 mg. amounts. The elderly just don't handle meds the way a young adult can, so smaller doses are appropriate. For your mil's constipation issue, have you tried Miralax? It's a powder that is stirred into liquid. Can't even taste it. Easy to adjust the dose. My mom has been using it regularly for years now. No, we don't even worry that she is " addicted " to laxatives. Our goal is comfort. With that goal in mind we even discontinued the PT she was having b/c she complained every time we tried to exercise her legs. It was a hard decision to make, but with comfort as the goal, we admitted it was best for her. Caregivers: that's a hard problem to solve. Keep networking; ask for recommendations at the doctor's office, at a senior center, and at church. The caregivers we have hired (to cover approx. 16 hours/week) have all been found by word of mouth. Only one didn't work out, but the rest have been amazing and have become friends. I hope you're able to have your getaway trip with your parents. The festival sounds awesome (I grew up in Concord and will always miss Cali.), so go and enjoy it for all of us. Sheila in IN daughter of Louise, age 88, dx LBD 7/2007 Seroquel 9AM - 37.5 mg. 3PM - 62.5 mg. 9PM - 100 mg. Posted by: " dsinouye " fullcircle@...  dsinouye Sun Nov 14, 2010 8:38 pm (PST) I and husband are caring for my 93 old mother in law. She was diagnosed 3 years ago and before that we were told she had dementia. The LBD and Parkinson’s was the new information that fit the picture to a “T†of what we have been struggling with the last 7 years. My mil had trouble several years before and I really wonder what was going on then – she was anorexic for the last 20+ years, and she fell a lot as she had very little balance. I don’t know where we are now in stages except a lot of things are late stage, more and more it seems. This week has been very difficult to say the least. She is still ambulatory but perhaps barely as it is a struggle to coach her to lift her feet, take big steps, don’t reach for the wall (that’s more than 3 feet away) don’t sit down etc. She doesn’t know when she’s about to have a bm or finished with one. The constipation is constant – the bowel is just not moving it through. Have tried the ducolax sup several times as directed by her docs and nothing. She’s very confused, out of it and very very crabby. She is biting all our heads off regularly. Several times this weekend her breathing is rough – it’s like she’s forgetting how to breath. The nebulizer no matter what we have tried as far as passiveness she hears that droning motor and starts huffing and puffing. I thought I was imagining things until I tried many times just switching it on and seeing and yes, the sound makes her start panting hard like she does when the mask is on her. We are now just doing the neb with mask while she is lying down comfortable and hope she’ll go to sleep and sometimes she does but then starts the hard panting again to the point of hyperventilating and making herself sick. Most of the time when I take the mask off she doesn’t even realize it’s off and still breaths like a runaway train. The giant hiatal hernia is causing the same problems with nausea and pain from excess gas and we keep trying to get her to sit or stand up straight so she’ll belch and relieve the pressure – this on top of the very small meals, etc. She doesn’t remember why or understand why her stomach hurts. And as far as trying to explain why she feels bad and how that relates to what she’s doing it’s not getting through the fog though she nods and acts like she understands. She is groaning almost constantly now – and we are constantly trying to figure out what the groaning is for. Pain? Nausea? Hungry? Need to go to bathroom? None of the above? I’ve asked her why she is groaning so much – she says it’s a habit. Or she says I didn’t groan I said (something). I give her feedback – you just started groaning, are you trying to say something? Yes, she was saying she wants some Jello. I tell her it didn’t sound like that but I’m very glad you can tell me you would like jello. So this is the speech thing I read about I guess. We have been working hard to keep her body strong and preserve her ability to move as much as possible but now we’re watching it take her mind away a lot more and her ability to control her body. This afternoon as I was trying to get her to do her leg lifts she said she was done she didn’t want anymore. I asked her what she was talking about - done with these exercises or done for the day… she said “everything!â€. She meant everything too. She said she doesn’t want to be alive anymore, it’s too hard, she’s done. At the same time we are strapped for finding good competent affordable caregivers. We had one but after 5 months she messed up really bad and didn’t think it was a problem and I had to tell her not to come back. I had the feeling she was not going to be around long when my mil started having more and more trouble. Maybe she couldn’t handle it. We have another caregiver now for the last 2 weeks and so far ok but not as good as I’d like. We really need an angel at this point. I have a friend also who is helping a little. We are still going to try to go see my folks for the weekend and have a grant from an local non profit to go towards respite care. My folks are just a couple hours drive away but it may as well be 20 hours it’s so hard to get away anywhere. I hope to go with my mother to the Mandarin festival in Auburn – which we’ve done every year. Usually she’s the one needing a sanity break (my father’s knee replacement was an ordeal!) but now I’m really looking forward to it also… afraid to look forward to it too much because it might jinx it. My mil’s doctor says she is not ready yet for hospice, they will expect she is in a lot worse condition. I’m wondering maybe try seraquel again and start out really low. She didn’t do well with the lowest dose pill but maybe if I cut it in quarters she could do better with a quarter of it? She’s taking Remeron now at night and after several attempts I had to start her on a quarter pill for two weeks before I could go to half a pill and it’s helping her at night as far as I can tell she relaxes a little and then sleeps some. Otherwise she is up all night tossing/turning/ agitated. Her doc said ¼ pill wouldn’t do anything but it really did a lot and she was pretty knocked out for the first 4 days before it started to improve to where she could sleep some at night and function in the day. That was about two months ago and now she is still sleeping some of the night but thrashing more too and some days barely coherent. I got pipe insulation foam and padded her bed with it and used vet wrap tape to hold it on. That way the bed rail functions but it doesn’t bruise her when she hits it all the time. She grips it at night like she’s on some kind of amusement park ride (mystery to us why) her arm was just black and blue all over because of it. That was a good idea that worked at least. I think we are close to being able to get another hospital bed through medicare and wondering if there are really any choices from the rack they sent before that was bent and rusted and I fight everyday. And if I should try to spring for an automatic version because I know I will not be able to crank it manually. And then wondering about practical things to come… and hoping we really do get a break this weekend, we could really use it. If this reads like a “report from the front line†it is – we are really feeling it now. Dorothy and Art Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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