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The similarity seems to lie in the big deficit being "executive functioning" which is a cognitive science term that covers sequencing, prioritizing, recall and similar skills that allow folks to know what to do when, and determine how important things are.
She also lost her initiative. She'd say she was going to do x-y-z but never did. "I'm going to write so-and-so." "I'll clean that up as soon as I'm off the phone." "I'll take a shower after breakfast." None of that would happen. Once I watched Teepa Snow videos on Youtube about dementia, I understood. She fully meant to do those things, her brain just wouldn't get her from Point A to Point B. It could still be frustrating for me. I learned that I had to stay until whatever it was she was wanting to do was done, because left to her own devices, it wouldn't be done. And then she'd forget she'd done it. So I had her writing things on her calendar, to help her remember. "Sent birthday card to X."
My mom was never on meds for her mood and she didn't have anxiety or depression. She was always very even-keeled. But she would cry from time to time, which was unusual for her. But then 30 minutes later, she'd forgotten that she was crying over something.
Once there, she started to be seen by both a geriatrician and a geriatric psychiatrist who were based at the facility. The psych doc put my mom on a low dose of klonopin, to be taken regularly, which helped "get ahead" of the anxiety and also insisited on having her worked up for cognitive decline. Most of the family was against this, since mom was "sharp as a tack" (except she was a crying, shivering mess most of the time). We went for the evaluation under the guise of "getting a baseline measurement".
When my mom was going to the neuropsychologist for the followup visit after her full cognitive work up she said "If they tell me I'm crazy, I'm not going to agree".
They diagnosed MCI, and the imaging that they had done found that my mother had had a stroke at some time in the past. I think the last finding reassured my mom that there was a reason for her loss of executive functioning; the findings were also helpful in convincing my brother that all of mom's anxieties and crying jags weren't "something she's doing to herself".
Eventually, mom was also started on antidepressents (in addition to the antianxiety meds) and her symptoms were able to be managed with medications quite well.