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While a Lender probably wouldn't become aware of a transfer if someone kept making the payments, your question, and several of the other answers posted here, point you to consider who is paying for care in the Nursing Home. If it's Medicaid, a transfer of the home will require an update of her eligibility status.
A disabled child could qualify as an exception to the Medicaid transfer rules, but you should talk with an elder law attorney in your state before considering any transfers of ownership, so that the interests of your brother and your mother are protected.
If you procrastinate and take no action to straighten out the home ownership status during your mother lifetime, the equity value of the house may pass into Medicaid's Estate Recovery system upon her death.
As FF writes, this is complex. One of the complexities would be since she is unable to make payments on the HELOC (Home Equity Line of Credit), it may go into foreclosure, and the home would be lost to the bank or company that holds the HELOC.
A quit claim deed would only discharge her interest in the property to someone else. The HELOC will return untouched, and still subject to payment and/or foreclosure.
One issue to be raised with an attorney is whether the brother has any vested rights in the home by virtue of having lived here for 14 years. BTW, is he getting any governmental support, and is your mother getting Medicaid?
Ask an attorney also about the possibility of selling the home and using the funds to pay for your mother's care, or to create a special needs trust for your brother.