I just found this site a week ago and I have been addicted to it ever since. We lost my sister-in-law 8 months ago and my mom was devastated. They were extremely close for 21 years. My sister-in-law and brother have three children, 17, 8 and 6, the 8 year old having autism.
My mother was her normal self while my sister-in-law was sick. She did everything to help my brother while he was taking care of his wife. After my sister in law's death, she again jumped in to help my brother care for the children. She seems fine for the first few weeks, then depression set in, she was crying daily, she stopped taking her medication for diabetes, and couldn't remember what I said to her 2 minutes before.
I was shocked at her sudden lack of memory retention! She'd ask me the same question five times in a 10 minute conversation!
I would talk to her multiple times a day and she was always bawling her eyes out. I would visit her and her house was a mess. All her clothes were dirty. No food in the house. And she was wearing dirty clothes. Her hair was matted. She lost 30 lb and her neighbors were calling me telling me she couldn't walk and she was bouncing off the walls. Obviously from her diabetes not being treated. She developed painful neuropathy, and bad sores on her feet.
I said, "that's it, you're coming home with me, if you don't you are going to die here alone."
I spoke with my brother and we agreed to talk to her about coming to live with me. We continue to speak to her about it over the next month. It was rough because....She forgot what we said the moment after we said it.
Oy Vey where is my mom!??? She was not like this 8 months ago!
So she's been with me two weeks and has had multiple breakdowns, freaking out, up all night cause she wanted to go home. After the third day of her being here, I took her to the ER and they gave her Xanax thank God. Next I took her to my doctor, and she put her on 10 mg of Lexapro. We got a new prescription for her diabetes medication which is Levemir 60 units once-daily. We had labs done today. We have a therapy (grief counseling) appointment set up for May 24th. And it's back to the PCP in 2 weeks. I read on here that an untreated UTI can cause dementia like symptoms. God I'm praying for that. I feel like .... "Mommy, where are you?"
Has anyone experienced an untreated UTI causing dementia like symptoms? If you have please share your experience with me. Thank you all for being here.
I'm very sorry to hear about the loss of your sister-in-law. I can imagine its been very hard on your mom and the whole family.
From what I understand it could be a UTI, but my other concerns would be side effects of any new or existing medications? Everyone reacts to medications so differently. It could be that grief coupled with the diabetes could be the bulk of it, but maybe there could be something else. High blood pressure, high cholesterol, undiagnosed vascular dementia. I hope the blood work and talking to the grief therapist will shed some light.
I recently had a UTI. I am not cognitively impaired, but I sure felt like it then. Brain fog, confusion, slow to comprehend what was being said to me, falls several times a day, auditory hallucinations. The culture for a UTI takes a few days. I did not drive during this period. I had an e-coli infection, and when it cleared up so did the symptoms!
It sounds like you are doing a great job getting to the bottom of this, and rescuing mom. I hope it is something that can be cured quickly. And if it isn't, your mom is certainly lucky to have you looking after her!
One other thought. After my husband died I expected to feel sad, perhaps to cry easily, to be emotional. Instead I became very forgetful and confused. I tried to pay for my groceries with my library card, for example. I was seeing a psychiatrist and a psychologist for different issues at that time and both of them assured me I was not permanently cognitively impaired. Having cognitive problems as part of mourning is not typical, but it does happen and it is as normal as any kind mourning. I am glad you have included grief counseling on your list of ways to help Mom. Is is indeed lucky to have you.
Sounds like you are doing everything you can do. I agree with the caveat that medications...especially psych meds...can cause unusual side effects. If your mom is elderly, it might be good to have a geriatrician or geriatric psychiatrist overseeing her medications.
Mom is only 72, a fantastic person and a wonderful mother. I'm hoping for the best. She has since stop crying and freaking out, and now she's starting to enjoy my animals. I have three cats a dog and my neighbor's white duck comes over every day for a visit. LOL. Whatever makes her smile.
Yes I will definitely get her into a geriatric physicians care. I would feel much better if someone were overseeing her meds especially now that anti-depressants and anti-anxiety meds have been added. Thanks again!
Depression is definitely lifting, I'm seeing a light at the end of the tunnel. :) Thank you to everybody for commenting, you don't know how good it is to feel I can reach out and talk to people about this. God bless
Alzheimers disease or dementia is sometimes referred to by medical pros and type 3 diabetes.
Blood sugar issues can definitely mess with her mind.
Also, yes a UTI or any infection can cause hallucinations and other brain issues. That is not dementia, it is just a side effect of an untreated infection.
Also, sometimes the medications themselves used to fight depression can have some crazy side effects.
There are natural ways to fight depression......exercise is a major one, doing fun things together, taking her outside her own head by helping someone else, sometimes helps.
One thing to remember is that antidepressants do take time to get up to speed. It usually takes at least a couple of weeks to see full results.
The UTI is treated and she is again showing interest in life around her.
My first though was also that your SIL's death and the lead up to it had thrown her into a tail spin and everything finally caught up with her.
Once she is stabilized she will probably be abe to go home and resume her former life if she so desires. Don't wait too long to address the need for more aggressive treatment of the diabetes. It all sounds as though it will be good from here in. I am sure she will be upset again when she reconnects with the deceased family so ease her into that gradually.
Dehydration can also give dementia type symptoms.
500 ml but after 5 days of being off it the UTI returns. She is definately being treated with the right medication as the sample is always being sent to the lab.
UTI’s affect the elderly horrible! It can cause terrible shaking and more severe memory loss
My mom 93 has a geriatric specialist she goes to. After many UTI’s he gave me a referral to a Urologist. She has chronic UTI’s and his nurse gives us extra sterile jars to bring home as she finds it hard to “pee on command” at the office.
I can take her in without making an office visit with a urine sample and within 15 minutes they test it and let me know. It still has to be sent to the lab but at least they get her on an antibiotic. There was only one occasion that they put her on cipro and when they got the results from the lab they put her on Keflex 500 right away.
I decorated her room in all lavenders, white and soft pink, this has been fun since I never had a daughter just three sons. LOL!
I would only suggest that after you are SURE the UTI is gone, try weaning off or eliminating the anti-depressants or anti-anxiety meds and see if the symptoms return. If they don't, most likely this was UTI driven (of course stress and grief do not help!)
Before dementia set in for our mother (she *could* have been in the very earliest beginning, but I believe it was before memory losses started), being OVER-hydrated was an issue. Having been told she had interstitial cystitis, she was instructed to eliminate certain foods, eat some specific ones, etc etc. I stopped by one day on the way to work because I called and she seemed out of it. I had to take her to ER - she was drinking TOO MANY fluids (all dating back to that 'drink eight 8oz glasses/day', which is wrong!) and her potassium (and possibly other minerals) was all messed up!!! You CAN drink too many fluids, and it waters down all the "salts" (electrolytes) in your system - same issue with excessive diarrhea/vomiting, but that is exacerbated by fluid loss too. Potassium being too low caused her confusion, befuddlement. Once IV treated, she was back to her nasty old self!
Anyway, with dementia that UTI is a bear! Mom was in meltdown every night, wanting out, had to go home, had guests coming - went on for hours before they finally calmed her down. Of course it was a Friday, so we could not get meds or test until Monday! Even before that happened I suspected UTI and she already had appt for Monday, so I added a request for that test while we were there. Yup. So later, when we visited this Thursday afternoon, the aide told me she was in a funk again Wed night. I called again on Friday to check on this (I had to twist doc's arm to get anti-anxiety to have on hand - we do not dose unless it is needed and it WAS needed - only one at night if she's "at it"!) They said she was at it again on Thursday night and she was in that mode when I on the phone with them.
I checked on the dates - she finished that antibiotic on the 1st (it took almost the full week to eliminate the "sun-downing" issues) and starting on the 9th we start up again. I suspect the meds did not fully work and she still has UTI (given a week to build up again!). So I plan to home test her this weekend and if positive, call the doc on Monday.
I don't recall who said it about not keeping mom on antibiotic medications all the time to avoid resistance - it is actually WORSE to do it that way. The bacteria that survived the treatment for a week are the ones that are stronger and cause the reccurence shortly after treatment, begetting stronger offspring as well. I was told years ago by a urologist that if a UTI doesn't clear up with a few rounds, say two, of antibiotics, then it should be continuous for like 6 months and possibly longer!
So, yes, UTIs in the elderly (mostly) can present as dementia, but it really isn't. Yes, UTIs can recur or not get treated with one or two rounds. Usually full lab testing is best because some meds work better on different strains of bacteria - best to get the right meds the first time!!
Depression and grief has gotten so much better. I talk to her daily about my sister-in-law, trying to make that subject not carry so much pain when she thinks about her. She has a locket around her neck that she carries some of sister-in-laws ashes in. She holds the lockit and talks to it at certain times. She's definitely coming to terms with the death and she's able to not grieve so much.
Her sense of humor is definitely back. She sits and watches some crazy talk shows with my son who is 20, and very attentive. They laugh and carry on! She's gotten much better with living with me, which, in the beginning, drove her crazy to know she was never going home.
Her hygiene is great, as a matter of fact, we're going for pedicures and manicures today! The bubble baths are out because I don't want to cause any more UTIs. But she does take a sit-down shower with a shower chair. I'll be coloring her hair Saturday. We just got her a haircut.
We bought her a bunch of new clothes that she really likes. She's really getting back to her old self.
This site is amazing! You guys have no idea the good you do and help you give! Thank you for caring and extending so much love and encouragement!💜
I use to be a regular poster here but have backed off recently to see if it helps to lessen my obsessing on my mother - the whole ball of wax from my childhood through her dementia and finally her passing. So - anyhoo...
I am so happy for you - to have read your update and that your mother is doing better. Still, I thought I’d share my first experience with a elder parents UTI:
Both my parents crashed physically at the same time. Mom was in the hospital and I had just put my father into rehab after an ER trip due to a prostate issue. Daddy wasn’t happy about it but accepted it as he knew he needed the medical care.
On my fathers second evening at the rehab he called me. Daddy was really agitated and was insisting that I come pick him up and take him home. I was a little baffled as just the day before he knew that was where he needed to be.
Then my dad started to talk about my driving to Corvallis, Oregon - my old college town from thirty years prior and a ninety minute drive from Portland, where I was - where HE was!
Seems my dad fully believe he was
in Corvallis, staying in my old sorority house - which had also been my moms sorority where he courted her, so he knew it well - and daddy thought all the nurses were my sorority sisters AND if I wasn’t freaked out enough - for added measure my dad seemed to think all the ladies were wearing skimpy lingerie!!! So - daddy being the solid, up-right kinda guy he was - he just felt the whole situation was inappropriate and I needed to come get him and take him home. NOW!!!
I called the rehab - after assuring my dad I would be there but it might take a while- they said they’d get him settled down and also get some urine to test. WTH??? I’d had a UTI once as a teen and I sure as heck didn’t have hallucinations!?!
No one bothered to tell me that a UTI
in the elder is a whole different deal. But sure enough - positive test -
antibiotics started and in 24
hours my dad was back to his usual self. Good thing too - as the staff caught my dad climbing out the window in his room that night.
After my fathers recovery and until the day he passed away, over a year later, my father remembered the incident. Daddy knew - rationally- that the situation never happened. But - my dad said that it still was so vivid to him he had a hard time accepting that it all never happened.
As for me, if I hadn’t experience it myself, I would have never believed it - what a UTI can do to the mind of the elderly.
Yeah, I do think my mom is in the early stages though. I just came back from taking her to grab a coffee and a ride around. She was crying earlier for my sis in law. But that was the first time in two weeks. I told her to cry it out. She feels better now.
Thanks so much for taking the time to write me and for sharing your experiences.💚
Are you getting any help working through your feelings about your mom? It's got to be tough. I'm an ear if you need one.👂 ••• lol
Disgustedtoo, I agree I think the UTI made her worse but some form of dementia is starting. Thank you!