My 67 year old husband has his follow up neuro appointment next month. In June, the neuro said she considered him "borderline" for cognitive impairment but she did not know at that time what form it might be. She wants to see him every 6 months. MRI was unremarkable, but she wanted a "baseline" MRI now for future comparison.
I do not want to tell the neuro, in front of my husband, things that I have observed that may...or may not...be related to cognitive impairment. We are asking her to rule out other possibilities such as ADD, HF Autism, etc. My husband remarks to me (half jokingly) now and again that he thinks I am trying to have him "committed." He is by no means in any middle or advanced stage of cognitive impairment. But he has short "episodes" of seeming confusion, he forgets things a lot more now and before his PCP put him on Lexapro he had gotten mean and nasty. He retired early and his brain is not being exercised as it should be...and he refuses to consider a part time job. I do not want to sit there at the appointment and, in front of him, go down the list of things I have noticed, only to have him blame me later. MUST I give input for the neuro or will the testing and her talking to my husband allow her to make a properl diagnosis without my input? Or will the neuro talk with me alone at some point?
Of concern is his oversight for his mother. Is there a contingency plan in place? He has no siblings, and if he is incapacitated by ANYTHING, who will see to her? Is she capable of naming another (additional) person to handle her affairs? If not, you will need to seek out legal advice as to how to proceed.
Secondary is having POA set up for you both. In the event that he is going down the cognitive decline path, having this will allow you to sell the cars you cannot drive and manage everything financially and medically. If at all possible, there should be a backup for you as well. It is so much easier/better to get it done now, while he could still make decisions. Later will be hard enough dealing with whatever life brings your way.
We have no way to know what the future brings to any of us, so it is best to have some precautions in place. Having a will, POAs, trust(s) if needed, burial arrangements, etc set up while you are both still capable is the best you can do. We had all this done with mom/dad when dad wasn't well and then revisited it when mom developed early dementia. We are glad we did all that before it was too late! It would have been more difficult AND more expensive to have to go through the court system to get guardianship.
I am remiss in doing this for myself, but only because currently there are no funds to cover the cost (looking at negative balance by end of year! working that out as best I can.) Starting in March, the financial situation will hopefully be under control (there will be a little relief before that, but not enough to cover the cost needed) and I want to get all that sorted out, to make things easier for my 2 kids AND to ensure my cats will all be taken care of (neither of them want the cats :-( or to take care of them.)
Please do consider getting all these tasks done, but stress to your husband it is just something everyone should do (and it is!), don't bring up the other issues.
The reason I say this is consider how long a doc actually sees you. They don't know the "real" you and don't see you much more than 10-15 minutes out of the day, here and there. That can be the "good" 10-15 minutes that particular day. Some people can whiz through the mini exam given to test for cognitive decline, yet can't remember they've repeated the same thing over and over in 10 minutes at home! YOU are there every day and YOU have known your husband for many years and therefore know him best and YOU have observed the changes. Clearly he isn't aware of the changes and/or isn't going to express his own possible concerns or fears.
You should provide whatever insight you have - some things you have observed may be okay, but others may assist the doc in making a better diagnosis.
You can provide this insight privately to the doctor. It could be invaluable in monitoring/assessing his condition! Tests and exams can only tell them so much, sometimes nothing really. Sometimes the tests and exams either don't detect anything, or the person can sail through them easily, but they are not able to function normally at home.
Robert
proven fact
Get him in a day program
My husbands neuro talks very plainly to my husband, tells him everything about his disease, etc. No bedside manner whatsoever. We have our list of questions for the visit. We talk about his progression & options all together. My husband was offended early on by some of her remarks, but we know she’s the best neuro in our state, and I think she means well. In my experience, they all have interesting personalities.
I’ve read in this site how people don’t ever tell their LO they have dementia, but my husband and I talk about it, along with everything else. Less often now as his lucid times are fewer.
financial matters, drive, shop, cook, clean, do yoga with him 3-4 times a week, take him traveling, movies, opera, plays, festivals. He bathes, dresses himself ( but there are problems with that), and tells his stories and jokes. He sometimes reads and always watches the news on his iphone. He’s really slowed down and gets tired so easily, but can still walk. He wanders. I’m lucky it hasn’t digressed to the point of incontinence/bathing/ being mean. The most uncomfortable thing for me is his inhibitions about sex are diminishing, but that’s for another thread.
financial matters, drive, shop, cook, clean, do yoga with him 3-4 times a week, take him traveling, movies, opera, plays, festivals. He bathes, dresses himself ( but there are problems with that), and tells his stories and jokes. He sometimes reads and always watches the news on his iphone. He’s really slowed down and gets tired so easily, but can still walk. He wanders. I’m lucky it hasn’t digressed to the point of incontinence/bathing/ being mean. The most uncomfortable thing for me is his inhibitions about sex are diminishing, but that’s for another thread.
This was all critical with my mom who could "turn it on" and fool doctors because she was so highly intelligent. Meanwhile she was losing her car, leaving the stove on, etc., etc. Our input was critical to her ultimate diagnosis.
I explained the issues that I see with dad and asked him to please not mention our conversation.
at the time of dads visit the doctor asked dad questions relating to what we had spoke of, dad of course said he didn't have that issue .
I said oh wait , don't you remember dad and I spoke to you about that very thing I saw.
dad said oh I don't remember that.
if the doctor doesn't get the entire story of some ones health,
they cant make an accurate conclusion of the problem.
sometimes toes have to be stepped on to help someone who
needs it...
good luck
I ended up building a close relationship with his nurses, so I could let them know of any declines or other things I observed, and she would pass on to doctor. I will usually call her a few days before his appointment. I never like to talk about his illnesses “behind his back” but being it is so hard ( emotionally also)to talk about The declines I see at the appt. with him there this has worked really well.
I also found myself holding back info to the doctor for the reasons you described.
Being it is so important the doctor knows everything, I don’t see my method as talking behind his back, but rather making sure the doctor knows everything.
it also makes the appointment much more calm for my patient because the doctor does already know in advance, so he knows how to gently talk to him, the questions he asks ect.
I know everyone’s situation is different, but I just thought I would let you know what has worked best, for everyone, with the man I care for.
I hope you are able to find something that works well for you.
your husband is very lucky to have you!
Remember sometimes, they are aware that something just is not right and can become frustrated with themselves and scared. Typically, the person they love the most is the easist target for outburst and blame. I am often the brunt of the cold sholder or silent treatement. I have to remember that it might be the disease talking at times!
I am curious to learn what others think about this approach.
My husband was 70 before things really progressed. He was also very mean and hateful to me and started on 20 mg of Lexapro. He was a different person after the Lexapro but when they started him on Aricept he went back to the bad behavior. The doctor stopped it for a month and then restarted the Aricept. That time it was better for some reason. That was about 6 years ago and he is now on a lot of other Alzheimers drugs and I'm dealing as best I can. Hopefully some of these post help you in moving forward. I pray for all of us as caregivers. Keep the faith and try to get through today because it's hard as you already know!
Thanks for the info about Aricept, too. I will remember your own experience of my husband ever needs this medication. As it is, he says he is "angry" that he nows has a "black mark" on his medical records due to being evaluated for dementia. He expressed the desire to stop seeing the neuro and that started a whole other conversation. I told him he must take all his tests and exams seriously and be honest with his neuro - tell her everything, honestly - so that she can properly diagnose him.
Here are a few examples of my mom issues that were included in the letter plus many more that were listed:
My mom was forgot how to find the hospital my father was in and kept going to the apartment building my grandmother used to live in and was upset they wouldn't let her go up to my dads room.
Every day my father was in the hospital I called my mother just to check on her, but after my father was home for 3 weeks one day when I called she said I can tell you now that your dad was in the hospital. I told her that I knew that and I called her every night, but she didn't remember it.
My mom usually went with my dad when he went for physical therapy, but one time she didn't and when my dad came home the stove was on with a pan on it
One day when I called my father said they were filling out some legal paperwork and I could hear my mom in the back ground wanting to know how do I spell my name.
This is a very small example of issues my mom was having. Those letters were a heads up to the doctors and at the appointments no fingers were being pointed as you did this or said that, the doctors already knew. It made handling the appointment so much easier. For the neurologist appointment, I was unable to get off of work and make the long trip, so my brother went with my parents and when the doctor told everyone that my mother did not passed and my mother has Alzheimer's, my brother and dad were shocked, but it didn't seen to faze my mother. The neurologist put her on medication to help slow the progression of Alzheimer's, which she was on for a couple of years and then as the disease went into later stages we took her off of it.
So we now actually had a diagnosis's and now could learn and check into how to handle this, what arrangements needed to be made. Unfortunately or fortuntely my dad passed away 7 months later after my moms diagnosis, so he did not have to see and try to take care of my mom as this dreadful disease took it's
toll. My parents were one of the rare few that were so in love with each other for their 65 yrs of marriage. My father would have never agreed to put my mother in a memory care center that would have killed him alone if he had to do that.
Do the letters with his doctor's, if you don't feel the doctor either didn't take the letters seriously or didn't read them then make a consultation appointment for yourself to talk to the doctor (realize you may have to pay for this appointment yourself). Definitely go in with him at the neurologist appointment, because he isn't going to remember what the doctor says.