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What stage is this.

Dusty217
Dusty217 Member Posts: 74
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I wonder if DH is further along in this journey than I suspect. He has had one episode of a delusion. He swore someone was knocking on our door in the middle of the night. We have a ring camera, so I knew this didn't happen. Could have been a vivid dream but he became angry with me when I said it didn't happen. I know in the future I will have to find a better way to handle this but at this point I'm not thinking on my feet.

I also see changes in his personality. He is agitated and often short with me much quicker than ever before. If a car pulls out in front of us even a large distance he calls them names. This is not DH.

He has been involved in community theater for the last 30 years and loves this activity. Three years ago he did a play with a large number of lines and had no issues. He learned his lines no problem, one year ago he was in a play with slightly less lines and struggled to learn them. At that time I felt he was just getting older. He was planning on doing a play this summer and got the part. He started working on lines and realized after several weeks he had no clue or memory of any of the lines. He has decided to not do the part as it was really stressing him. This was a good decision.

At this point memory issues are all short term. I tell him something a date or story and 30 min later he has no memory of the conversation.

Financial issues, He has completely stopped looking at our money, bank account or financial situation. Just stopped paying attention and I now handle it all. He was always on top of this but over the past year has stopped.

Cooking: DH was the main cook in the family, and he can still cook simple things. If new or involved recipe I now have to reassure or assist him with it. I went to not cooking at all, because he loved to, now cooking at least 70% of meals. He just seems so unsure.

Really anything new throws, him for a loop. Just not the old DH.

He does complete all his own ADL's. Can shop with a list and is okay if the Calander is updated daily on scheduled activities.

Sorry for the long post I just keep thinking of stuff. Any insight would be wonderful.

Comments

  • jgreen
    jgreen Member Posts: 387
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    Welcome @Dusty217

    It sounds like you and DH have a dementia diagnosis. @H1235 gave you some good tools to use with staging. Know that your loved one can show signs in multiple stages - the disease does not follow a linear path. It is helpful for you so you are not surprised with new behaviors and can be ready with a response that will not agitate your DH.

    Do your research on the disease. There are numerous books and websites with information. I have and find the book “The 36-Hour Day” quite helpful. Health professionals that I visit online are Tam Cummings, Teepa Snow, Natalie Edmonds and Camille Sinclair.

    If you haven’t already, meet with an Elder Care Attorney and get your legal affairs in order - durable power of attorney, HIPPA forms and Healthcare surrogate, and will/trust. An attorney can also help you apply for Medicaid and also talk about options for care should you need in-home care or placement in memory care or nursing home.

    Sounds like he has progressed to where he should not be driving. This was the biggest battle for me and still rears its ugly head every now and again. I have keys hidden and most often have to stop what I am doing to drive him to his desired destination. I try to make light of my response and say something like “It’s a nice day for a drive; let me take you.”

    Come here often and do let us know how you are doing. We care.

  • Dusty217
    Dusty217 Member Posts: 74
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    Thank you. I will come often. I just downloaded the book "The 36 hour Day". I'll be reading it on and off over the next month. We started the Lawyer stuff and will have in place Wills, Health Care and Financial Power of Attorney. We both did living wills. I'm fine right now but almost 70 so it's time to have those in place. My DH is 67. I thought I would be having issues like this before him. Funny when he did the word remember testing, I could remember them. Guess I'm okay for now. The driving issue I will face shortly, hoping a clear diagnosis will make it easier for him to accept but I know I need to face that issue soon.

  • jgreen
    jgreen Member Posts: 387
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    There is a condition called anosognosia that is part of dementia - the inability to understand they have impaired cognitive function. Unfortunately your DH will never ‘accept’ his diagnosis and it causes problems if you try to explain or reason with him. You will have to figure out how to handle the driving when the time comes. Many on here have faced same challenge and might have tips for you.

  • Dusty217
    Dusty217 Member Posts: 74
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    I have not ordered the TILE but have Life 360 on the phone. I will add TILE at soome point.

  • Dusty217
    Dusty217 Member Posts: 74
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    Yes, and I still am not sure it didn't happen, the knock on the door but I believe my instincts and think it was a delusion.

  • Michele P
    Michele P Member Posts: 451
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    You have gotten good advice here. Be aware that even if it appears that your husband has things under control, he might not. Your husband might get lost driving or walking in a familiar place. From what you described, he should not be driving. If he gets in an accident, your insurance company will not cover it. He will automatically be at fault, and you will get sued for everything you own because he should not have been driving.

  • JDancer
    JDancer Member Posts: 602
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    Please don't delay on driving. He could easily have an accident or get lost at any time. It the US, a post accident lawsuit can be devastating. Taking away the keys now could save a life.

  • Dusty217
    Dusty217 Member Posts: 74
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    I did talk with memory care, and they have a driver test and also added that while just MCI and not dementia he can still drive. Even documented in his chart. They did advise I always go with him. My insurance also stated we are covered as long as not Dementia. It will increase the cost of insurance. The memory Doctor gave him diagnosis of MCI "likely" caused by Alzheimer's. So until this changes for now I go every time we head out and drive in the busy or unknown areas.

  • JDancer
    JDancer Member Posts: 602
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    edited April 4

    If you're in the car, is there a reason you aren't behind the wheel? If the medical record uses the word "Alzheimer's" I would be concerned. If a lawyer found this in a deposition, a costly judgement could go against you.

Commonly Used Abbreviations


DH = Dear Husband
DW= Dear Wife, Darling Wife
LO = Loved One
ES = Early Stage
EO = Early Onset
FTD = Frontotemporal Dementia
VD = Vascular Dementia
MC = Memory Care
AL = Assisted Living
POA = Power of Attorney
Read more