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Conference turris::womannotes-v3

Title:Topics of Interest to Women
Notice:V3 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1078
Total number of notes:52352

430.0. "Another daughter" by CINAMN::MHOWARD () Tue Oct 09 1990 18:13

    
    I am the daughter who tries to advise and help the 78 year old mother
    who has been diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease.  All logic is gone. 
    Time loses its reality.  Today is Thanksgiving, last week is 20 years
    ago.  And yet this woman can cover her condition so well that others
    have trouble believing me at first.  Her bills are not being paid, yet
    she needs no help, thank you.  There is no longer any dirty laundry
    since a magic elf takes care of it.  I sometimes resort to sneaking her
    soiled clothes into the washer.  I have had to become a liar and a
    sneak in order to properly and safely help this woman who taught me
    never to lie and never to sneak.  My role reversal is almost complete. 
    Soon I will have to take away my mother's legal rights and put her in a
    place where she will be safe from herself.  
    
    And my brother does nothing.  
    
    No one said life would be fair, but it still hurts.
    
    Marilyn  
    
    
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430.1Me Too...HENRYY::HASLAM_BACreativity UnlimitedTue Oct 09 1990 19:3648
    Marilyn,
    
    My mother had Alzheimer's, and I was her care provider.  It is a
    bizarre and ugly disease that causes frustration, anger, and pity
    in the care provider, the care give, and the patient.
    It not only victimizes the person afflicted but also victimizes
    all those around them.  The hardest thing to believe is that your
    mother really *is* acting this way--that she really *is* acting
    like she's totally lost it.  The fact is that she really *is* losing
    it and it seems to accelerate as it gets worse.  She cannot help
    herself.  She really doesn't have control and that probably scares
    her a lot.                
                              
    In the stage she currently is, she is simply forgetting and mixing
    up things.  After while, she will begin fighting about everything
    and acting like a naughty child, then she'll do a total reversal
    and be sweet and docile for a brief time.  She may show signs of rather
    bizarre behavior such as walking into a room of people without clothes
    on, or even exhibiting rather overt sexual conduct.  There will
    come a time when she can no longer dress herself properly, clean
    herself properly, go to the bathroom without help, etc.  From a
    personal perspective, Marilyn, your mother actually will appear
    to be going backwards in her development and regressing to infancy. In
    essence, I believe this is what happens.  Her brain is shutting
    down piece by piece.  When it gets to the point that her body shuts
    down the vital functions in it's regression, she will die.  By that
    time, she will be in diapers, not know anybody, have to be strapped
    into a chair so she doesn't fall out, and it will take about two
    people to feed her--one to hold up her head, and one to put the
    pulverized food into her mouth.  She will not be able to chew, to
    drink, to hold eating utensils, etc.  She will be, for all intents
    and purposes, a neonatal exhibiting the characteristics of a newborn
    and still regressing.     
                              
    It is painful to even think of things like this, but it is reality.
    The longest an Alzheimer's patient lasts is, I understand, about
    eight years maximum.  Some people deteriorate slower and some faster.
    If you are lucky, it will be fast.  My mother and I weren't so lucky.
    She lasted about five years or more.
                              
    If I may be of any support during this painful time in your life,
    please write or call me at DTN: 544-3179.
                              
    My thoughts are with you, 
                              
    Barb                      
                              
                              
430.2MOMCAT::CADSE::GLIDEWELLWow! It's The Abyss!Tue Oct 09 1990 23:3918
Marilyn,

 Have you been able to get your mom a *real* good medical
going over ... some people are diagnosed with Alzheimer's
when it's really a circulation problem ... there are
specialists in this area. anyway, if you've just been
to one doctor, a specialist may have something. (Of course,
I say this ... probably back-wishing. My mother-in-law
had a long long decline into Az's and a battalion of
medical tests turned up nothing else.

 You have my sympathy and good wishes.  This is about
as tough as it gets.

 >    And my brother does nothing.  
    
What does he say ... or is he pretending everything is
just fine and mom is still not a day over 50.  Meigs
430.3Alz InfoCINAMN::MHOWARDWed Oct 10 1990 15:2023
    Thanks Barb and Meig, for your comments.  I am aware of the decline,
    both physical and mental, of the Alzheimer's victim.  I have read books
    and attended support groups and talked to other people with aging
    parents.  I have educated myself for the past two years since my Mom
    was diagnosed at the Memory Disorder Unit at Mass. General Hospital.  I
    believe their diagnosis is correct.  But it is still so painful to know
    that she forgets all birthdays, the names of her great-grandchildren,
    and usually forgets to buy Christmas gifts, cards, etc., which she
    always did in the past.  If I try to help, she says everything is taken
    care of!  
    
    I am too soft, and this is very painful.
    
    My brother admits and agrees to the diagnosis, but offers no
    help..moral, financial, supportive, nothing.  But his behavior
    goes further back than the Alzheimer's diagnosis.  He also lives in
    Atlanta, and my mom and I live in the Boston area.
    
    I wish there was a support group where both my mom and I could go
    together to develop better communication during this terrible time. 
    Are there holistic approaches that we haven't even tapped?
    
    Marilyn
430.4Sr. Services?CSC32::M_EVANSWed Oct 10 1990 15:4210
    Marilyn,
    
    Surely in the Boston area there is an alzheimer's support group?  They
    may be accessed through the local senior services organizations there. 
    These are the same people running meals on wheels in Colorado Springs. 
    I know that here they have an alzheimers's group that includes adult
    day care, and eventual residential care here.  Although I don't know
    who sponsor's this here.
    
    Meg
430.5JURAN::TEASDALEWed Oct 10 1990 16:356
    Marilyn,
    
    I can't believe you're too soft.  If I'm ever in a similar position, I
    only hope I have your strength...and compassion.
    
    Nancy
430.6pointersLYRIC::BOBBITTCOUS: Coincidences of Unusual SizeWed Oct 10 1990 17:539
    see also:
    
    LBDUCK::CARING_FOR_ELDERS
    57 - help with alzheimers
    65 - specialist for alzheimers
    66 - alzheimers support group
    
    -Jody
    
430.7MOMCAT::CADSE::GLIDEWELLWow! It's The Abyss!Thu Oct 11 1990 21:549
>   My brother  ... offers no help... financial, supportive, nothing.  

Marilyn,

Maybe it is time to ask.  Perhaps hit him up now for twenty
or forty a week. At least something. This will help now,
and it might be a useful habit to encourage so that if care 
expenses go way up, he will have committed himself to some
degree.  Meigs
430.8Possible Alzheimer's treatment on the horizon.TCC::HEFFELThat was Zen; This is Tao.Tue Oct 16 1990 11:4731
	I saw this in Fridays' paper:

Tracey

********************************************************************************

	Two discoveries raise hopes for therapies for Alzheimer's


	The twin discoveries of a protein that appears to cause the brain cell 
destruction found in Alzheime's disease and of a natural brain hormone that 
blocks the ability of the protein to kill cell may lead to therapies to halt and
reverse the disease, according to a team of Harvard researchers.

	The report, which appears in the current issue of the journal Science, 
was ahiled as a major devevlopment by Dr. Creighton Phelps, medical director of
the Chicago-based Alzheimer's Disease Association, which funded the research 
alng with the National Institutes of Health.

	"This is very exciting because it opens up all kinds of possibilites,"
Phelps said.  "If this proves to be true, we got the potential for a treatment."

	There is now no effective therapy for Alzheimer's, which affects an 
estimated 4 million Americans.  Alzheimer's is a progressive neurodegenerative
disease marked by the gradual loss of memory, reasoning, orientation and 
judgement.  

	Although the report is encouraging, Phelps cautioned that the experi-
ments were conducted on brain cells grown in culture and that the findings need
to be verified.

430.9PainCINAMN::MHOWARDFri Oct 19 1990 18:1312
    There are support groups in the Boston area, but they are for the
    family alone, NOT the victim.  The victim is usually unaware that
    anything is wrong, or if they do admit anything to themselves, they 
    cover it up by story-telling (not really lying).  At least this is my 
    limited experience.    
    
    My mother is taken care of financially, but the emotional burden
    is the hardest for me.  This disease is turning my mother into a person
    I don't want to know or be with.  And yet she needs me now more than
    ever.  What a conflict!
      
    Marilyn      
430.10Support GroupHYEND::BGARDNERMon Oct 22 1990 22:253
    My heart goes out to you.  I jotted down a number of an Alzheimer's
    Support Group for a friend and still have it in a pile on my desk.
    1-617-491-0546.  Hope it helps.
430.11CUPCSG::DUNNEThu Oct 25 1990 17:369
    RE: .9
    
    Marilyn, I know how you feel and I sympathize. My mother died of
    Lou Gehrig's disease 11 months ago, and she was exactly as you
    describe. It's the worst experience I ever had, I think. I hope
    you have people to talk to. That helped me. Feel free to send mail 
    if you want to.
    
    Eileen