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I'm feeling very good now because I had my epidural. These shots are keeping me from having more surgery. I don't know how long I will be able to keep getting them before it becomes dangerous. The surgery would mean another fusion, bone removed from the other hip this time, wearing a brace for 3 months, with 3 months of PT after that. Not a pleasant thought. Al couldn't take care of me a year ago and my poor daughter was run ragged between her job, her bi-polar husband and her grandchildren. I get so depressed thinking about it.
Assisted Living is not an option for us -- even if we sold everything we own, we'd only have enough $$ for one of us. Makes a person wonder if the struggle to get Al through ten years of college was worth it.
Take care all I know how hard it is....god bless us and give us strength
I know it is different when it's your father instead of a husband. I lost both my parents before they ever needed help. Just hang in there, get help when/where you need it and try to keep smiling.
Thanks again for your information will going to that web site need all the info I can get
One factor in judging someone's progression is the baseline. Did he lose things often when he was "normal"? That is a little different than someone who hardly ever lost things suddenlybeginning to lose things right, left, and center.
Many years ago my mother had an unexplained seizure. The doctor was trying to see what lead up to it. All seven of Mom's kids were assembled. "Has she had a poor memory lately?" We looked at each other blankly. "Well," he tried to explain, "has she been forgetting the names of her grandchildren?" In spite of the seriousness of the situation we all burst out laughing. She gets OUR names wrong, never mind the next generation. This has been going on since she had more than one child. So that particular example didn't tell us anything about changes in her current status.
In addition to looking at lists of symptoms, it is important to use what you know about your loved one's abilities and weaknesses before the illness, to judge how serious the current symptoms are.