By proceeding, I agree that I understand the following disclosures:
I. How We Work in Washington. Based on your preferences, we provide you with information about one or more of our contracted senior living providers ("Participating Communities") and provide your Senior Living Care Information to Participating Communities. The Participating Communities may contact you directly regarding their services. APFM does not endorse or recommend any provider. It is your sole responsibility to select the appropriate care for yourself or your loved one. We work with both you and the Participating Communities in your search. We do not permit our Advisors to have an ownership interest in Participating Communities.
II. How We Are Paid. We do not charge you any fee – we are paid by the Participating Communities. Some Participating Communities pay us a percentage of the first month's standard rate for the rent and care services you select. We invoice these fees after the senior moves in.
III. When We Tour. APFM tours certain Participating Communities in Washington (typically more in metropolitan areas than in rural areas.) During the 12 month period prior to December 31, 2017, we toured 86.2% of Participating Communities with capacity for 20 or more residents.
IV. No Obligation or Commitment. You have no obligation to use or to continue to use our services. Because you pay no fee to us, you will never need to ask for a refund.
V. Complaints. Please contact our Family Feedback Line at (866) 584-7340 or
[email protected] to report any complaint. Consumers have many avenues to address a dispute with any referral service company, including the right to file a complaint with the Attorney General's office at: Consumer Protection Division, 800 5th Avenue, Ste. 2000, Seattle, 98104 or 800-551-4636.
VI. No Waiver of Your Rights. APFM does not (and may not) require or even ask consumers seeking senior housing or care services in Washington State to sign waivers of liability for losses of personal property or injury or to sign waivers of any rights established under law.I agree that: A.I authorize A Place For Mom ("APFM") to collect certain personal and contact detail information, as well as relevant health care information about me or from me about the senior family member or relative I am assisting ("Senior Living Care Information"). B.APFM may provide information to me electronically. My electronic signature on agreements and documents has the same effect as if I signed them in ink. C.APFM may send all communications to me electronically via e-mail or by access to an APFM web site. D.If I want a paper copy, I can print a copy of the Disclosures or download the Disclosures for my records. E.This E-Sign Acknowledgement and Authorization applies to these Disclosures and all future Disclosures related to APFM's services, unless I revoke my authorization. You may revoke this authorization in writing at any time (except where we have already disclosed information before receiving your revocation.) This authorization will expire after one year. F.You consent to APFM's reaching out to you using a phone system than can auto-dial numbers (we miss rotary phones, too!), but this consent is not required to use our service.
*If I am consenting on behalf of someone else, I have the proper authorization to do so. By clicking Get My Results, you agree to our
Privacy Policy. You also consent to receive calls and texts, which may be autodialed, from us and our customer communities. Your consent is not a condition to using our service. Please visit our
Terms of Use. for information about our privacy practices.
Frontotemporal dementia, or FTD, can be particularly hard on loved ones
https://www.nextavenue.org/ftd-dementia-misdiagnosed/?fbclid=IwAR3YExb9XHquG1jvcwFV-O2bn1G3b1ShN9AwQi0367_nq2jtoTxR8CuEYnI
Christy was tagged with the Alzheimer's label since 2006 and I see that is a common error. FTD was identified in 2014. 8 years after onset
Only by a chance phone call with a social workers was FTD identified.
The worker's husband had died from FTD and she recognized Christy's whimpering and growling in the background.
I have cared for Christy at home since 2006. She was banned from PACE day care in 2014 for attacking the staff. She drew blood on the director and they had to place her in a room with 4 staff guarding,
Christy was denied university geri/psyche ward because they would have had to both physically and chemically restrain her.
She startles at people noises and attacks the source. She went after staff who were laughing in the break room and then went ballistic when the drawer of the crash cart closed. They could not even get vitals.
Christy is only aggressive when there is discomfort, and violent when there is pain.
It is ironic that my nephew who was born with CDL is the same.
They can't express need or even comprehend their need.
Christy is agitated by some needs, hungry, thirsty, have to pee, already peed, have to poop, polyester and don't touch me.
FTD can cause veracious appetite. Christy does not know how to grasp objects so I hand feed her chopped food continuously all day.
She doesn't know how to drink from a cup or sip from a straw, so I have to hydrate her continuously with a turkey baster.
I toilet her every 2 hours. That involves supporting her from behind and apllying forward pressure to force her walk to the toilet. It is dangerous to approach Christy from the front.
Christy's enemies that cause violence are sudden noise, constipation, burning diarrhea, candida, seizures and restraint.
She is scary when constipated, The family backs off and lets me handle her those days.
Fortunately we have finally learned, signs of the severity and how to quickly remedy
The main cause is hydration. Although we hydrate her continuously and add a lot of water to food, she can be stubborn to drink.
There is no medication for FTD and Alzheimer's meds cause adverse effects.
Christy is permanently doubled over for no physical reason due to Alzheimer meds.
We give Christy cannabis edibles during the day but oral medication does not work when constipated.
I had to have my pain meds all delivered by IV when I was in the hospital.
Tylenol suppositories worked, also
There is no Rx for FTD seizures except cannabis, which stops the seizure within a minute. Edible canabis can take a couple hours to act and the seizures need to be stopped immediately so we deliver cannbis by smoke, which is instant.
The cannabis also calms her for several hours.
Burning diarrhea. I have had that a couple times in my life and it is excruciating.
When she is acting out, violent, we often note that there is an acidic odor and a yellowish smear when we dry wipe her,
That is remedied with a cool water enema.
The water flushes the inflammation casing debris from the anal and rectal folds.
It is Immediate relief and cure.
If the inflammation is severe we keep suppositories in the freezer.
The cold is instant and long lasting relief.
A washcloth and bowl of ice water works also.
Candida. Christy never had yeast infections, but since this disease, she get candida under her breast. She becomes violent and we can smell the candida. It smells like mouse urine. I had it under an armpit once and it is painful and itchy.
I thought it was Christy but she looked clear. Then I discovered it was me.
I researched in the internet and see that many women suffer with candida under their breast for days and weeks,
Desenex foot powder cures Christy instantly as it did my armpit.
Polyester clothing is an irritant.
I took some “time off” this past week from visiting my mom and that was helpful. I’ve also grasped that we are actively grieving our loss while simultaneously seeing her suffer.
My mom still knows us, but she is not oriented to place or time so she is confused when we appear and so frightened. That is what underlies the anger and frustration, then aggression.
Yesterday I visited and tried to remain mostly quiet and decrease stimuli. It was a much better visit. She also responds well to my dog. He is a large golden doodle and he loves her. She pets him and let’s him kiss her and he has a calming effect most of the time.
My philosophy moving forward is to practice the golden rule and treat her as I would want to be treated. I would not like to be abandoned at the end of my life while suffering such a horrendous disease. I will take breaks when needed and continue to work with the staff and her drs to make her days and our visits the best they can be.
For the record, she hasn’t fallen in the past month, as we have been tweaking meds.
You have your answer. It may be best to wish her well, pray for her and either cut down visits or don't go anymore.
How painful this conduct must be for you!
This is not your mom. Your mom loves you and wouldn't treat you like this. This is the disease.
(((Hugs))))
Have you tried the weighted calming blankets? Might it calm your mother and provide the extra weight that keeps her from bolting?
I'm trying to understand your perspective, which I've heard from many others on this site, that her altered state involving agitation, hitting, kicking and biting is preferable to zombie.
I'm trying to figure out the pros and cons of visiting someone whose agitated, hitting, kicking and biting plus going home afterward devastated and sad versus administering sedation that may prevent the agitation, hitting, kicking and biting. Although sedation makes older people groggy, dosage is started low and at bedtime, and if the visit is less awful, I know I would want that. Otherwise and as someone wrote above, I'd seek to have my emotional needs met elsewhere or I'd trying visiting just observing rather than interacting.
You're certainly in a difficult spot. There are no good answers. It's just picking the least bad one. You have my sympathy.
If she wants to be more active, get a kids ball for a $1.00 and toss it to her or hand it to her. I did that with mom. She had ALZ. One day I did it a bit too much, and she threw it at me with anger and frustration in her eyes. I guess she didn't want to play any more. I got a ball that was bright with the disney princesses on it.
If other people were in the room, I would play toss with anyone who wanted to. It was fun. Even the people who couldn't catch the ball, I would walk it over to them, and hand them the ball so they could touch it, and act like they were catching and throwing. They all wanted attention.
Can you ask at the facility if they might have or know of a support group? They do help.
She is also severely sensitive to all medication. So while sedating can make her less combative, she also is less stable on her feet and falls. Chemically restraining her is also controversial and that’s where we walk a fine line of managing behavior with meds vs. safety. Currently we haven’t had a fall in about 3 weeks. We continue to change and monitor her care. At care meetings we are on a path of taking some meds away vs. adding and of course closely monitoring the effect.
The staff is wonderful with her. She is always close to them and observed. To the point of often having her sit right in the office. I don’t want to turn her into a zombie.
Today my visit was heartbreaking. When I got there she was crying. My mom has become so nasty towards me, saying I hate her so much I locked her in that place. She's in a beautiful retirement home with staff that treat her so lovingly. The staff tell me she participates in all the activities and is happy most of the time.
From reading these posts I don't know why but it seems to be me that triggers her to be so upset. I am the primary caregiver and used to visit 3-4 times a week. I've been having seizures so only go once a week when I can get a drive to see her. I don't know if me not being able to visit as often has upset her routine or if she thinks I've abandoned her.
I grieved for my mother in her years of infirmity.
This is many times that grief.
I relate to the movie '50 First Dates' only I get to court her 50 times a day.
She has bvFTD, not the same as FTD, not Alzheimers.
bvFTD is Behaviour Variant FrontoTemporal Dementia.
She became mean in 2006, at age 53. institutionalization was recommended.
I kept her home, kept her close.
In 2011, she became violent and forgot who I am, who she is.
Doctors administered Alzheimer's drugs which had adverse and permanent physical effect,
I am sitting here watching her. She has to be watched as she will suddenly get up and pace. She has no 'safety awareness and will bump into objects. I do not restrain, as she is enraged by restraint and the pacing prevents muscular atrophy and clotting
She used to attack if approached when there is any discomfort. constipation, headache, has to pee, or already did.
Life was hellish for several years.
Life has been good since we discovered cannabis in 2013, and I am so glad I kept her.
There is no recovery, no healing, no improvement possible with bvFTD,
Christy's doctor says that the Cannabis administered for her seizures probably calms the bvFTD chaos in her brain and allows her momentary connections with who she was.
The Christy I married is gone, but I love this person and enjoy my days with her.
My mother, also, began exhibiting behavior like that toward me. I was her caregiver, and had to put her in AL, because I could not physically handle it. However, she treated the aides in her new home in the same manner.
One day, in anger, and desperation, while having a tantrum, my mother blurted out, "My back hurts!"
A couple months earlier, while my sitting on her bed, she had slipped off onto the floor, landing on her bottom. Since my dad couldn't get her up, paramedics were called. They brushed her off and said she was fine. In actuality, she had two compressed fractures in her lower lumbar. Of course, no one knew that, and continued with her in her usual routine, which was badly hurting her. She didn't have the verbal abilities to let us know the pain we were causing her! Perhaps your mother is in pain?
Whatever the reason, it could be that she is trying to express some discomfort, and is angry you aren't get it. I'll pray that you find her need.
I am (80), and have two longtime friends and one family member by marriage suffer from LB dementia. It is a particularly devastating disease because, at least in my (3) encounters with it, the extreme combativeness and downright meanness seems to be where that type of dementia ends up.
My wife has had Alzheimer’s for (9) years and while it is difficult, I have not had to deal with that extreme personality turn. We are blessed, but you must consider yourself blessed that you had your “real” mother for as long as you did. Miss and grieve her now because that is only human. But carry no grief or burdens forward. You both have been good and loving daughters. God bless! And, HE does!!
I would encourage you to seek out a compassionate Hospice organization, interview them, and start immediately talking with the social worker and/or grief counselor/bereavement specialist. While, clinically, she may or may not be eligible for the service at this time, 99% of hospices will welcome you with open arms. Support groups often have other people who, too, are no longer capable of giving or receiving physical affection from a beloved parent... you may have multiple ways to give the care that is your intrinsic need.
Use a journal to write down all of the kind, loving moments and words from your Mother that you recall... from your entire life. Make that your time together. Tell her in your journal what you would do to ease her suffering and yours, because in the flesh you cannot. Tell her why you feel guilty... and then forgive yourself- if she knew and had the physical capability of processing that information, she would forgive you, too. You're not a bad person for taking care of so many others and now not being to care for her in the way that you want to. This is not your fault... and not hers either.
There's nothing you can do or could have done to stop the amyloid plaques in her brain from clustering. There's nothing you can do stop this horrible digression in its tracks. You can though, allow her to get thru her day without an episode like the one you described... that too, is caring. Merciful caring for both of you.
My dad was also a fall risk but the neurologist explained that unmanaged behavior posed an even higher risk to his ability to be housed and cared for. LBD patients can be problematic and many facilities won't take them if they have a reputation for difficult, and particularly combative behavior.
You may need to rethink your position on her medications and treat these interactions with her as a symptom that you need to get addressed on her behalf. Perhaps your own visits will improve as a result. Mine did, although irritability was always present.
One thing you can't successfully do is explain missing brain matter back into existence in your interactions with her. Others are correct that there is a level of acceptance incumbent on you because things will never be like they once were.
After my dad died, I spent 6 weeks dealing with infections because I was so run down from my severe stress. Others are also correct that to protect your own well-being you may have to take a break and manage her care from a distance.
Being a care manager for someone with dementia is as much an exercise in courage as it is in compassion. Sometimes you just have choose the best option from among unhappy choices because the good choices are no longer in play. It takes real personal fortitude to set your own desires aside and realize that your decisions for your mom's highest good sometimes will leave your own wishes unmet.
Wishing you strength and health through this tough journey.
Do you and your sister go together?
Is the reaction the same if you go one at a time?
It is possible that she may feel "ganged up on" if there are 2 of you at the same time.
And depending on her Dementia she may be getting the 2 of you confused and this would be frustrating for her if that is the case.
If you try going on different days and the reaction is the same then it is the disease not your Mom that is reacting. If that is the case would it be possible even with her being a fall risk that you choose a time when she is in bed and the staff can medicate her prior to your visit so you can see her for a while then let her have a nap or if it is evening just let her sleep. I understand if this is a risk that you and the staff do not want to take but I have to imagine that she is probably like this with staff as well and I would think they have to do something before showers or a bath it would be to dangerous to take a fighting person into the shower area.
(Just another thought if she is not combative with staff next time you visit wear scrubs so you look like staff and see if you get a different reaction)
I have been there.
Some days will be good, others hard. Make sure to do nice little things along the way for yourself. Do nice things for your sister, and others in your Mom’s circle. They are suffering too. These hard times can make you closer. Doing nice little things for others (when you can’t for your mom) will bring you relief.