She has refused to eat and eats very little now, going on the second week. She will eat ice cream, but not any "regular" food. We have cut food into small bites, tried not to overwhelm her, had others try to feed her. We are kind of at our wit's end! Very frustrating! She has only been formally diagnosed since January, 2018, but in reality, this has been going on for at least five (5) years. Amazing how you can see those signs now, but we clearly didn't recognize them when they were happening. Any ideas are most appreciated. She says everything tastes like "crap". Her sleep patterns are all over the chart. Sometimes she's up all night and then sleeping during the day when meals are offered. Other times, she sleeps all night, but then appears to be dozing still during the day.
Any calories are better than nothing and quite frankly with Alzheimer's shoot for quality and forget about quantity.
3 months happy eating ice cream 6x daily or 3 years miserable not knowing who is feeding you or who you are?
I'm sorry that your family is going through this awful disease.
Thats a good idea with the carnation instant breakfast, will she drink milkshakes? You can always add fruit to get some fiber in her diet. I personally love chocolate and banana, strawberry, pineapple, coconut, peanut butter, mango, oh, I guess chocolate and anything .
If she doesn't like shakes, you can add the ingredients, blend and refreeze.
Try not to get caught up in all the what if's, maybe's and second guessing, just when you think you've got it, it changes.
Focus on safety and wellbeing with out taking her reactions to heart, if she eats ice cream, she is not hungry, if she needs to go to the dr and doesn't want to, oops, sorry you need to mom, you get the idea.
You can do this!
🤗Hugs for all you do!🤗
She likes McD spicey chicken sandwiches once in a while. At least it is some nutrition.
Cannabis edibles 10-15 mg. Candy Bars and gummies are the easiest to calculate size/dose.
Edibles can take 1 or more hours to have effect, but it is long lasting, 5-6 hours.
We administer concentrate 8 AM and 1 PM.
I dose of concentrate is the size of a half grain of rice.
Cost is two dollars per day.
Result is a calm with voracious appetite (munchies) and much laughter.
The 1PM dose effect diminishes toward evening and time for sleep.
Busy, productive days afford good sleep.
Middle of the night seizures require smoking for instant relief rather than the delay of edibles.
We were never smokers so I administer (shotgun) via Cpap hose and mask.
The hose buffers the smoke to minimize irritation and contains the smoke to not waste into the air.
2 'hits' of high THC Indica ( 20+ mg) stops seizures within a minute and calms for the rest of the night. Wake up smiles ensue.
Indica for nightime calming and sleep.
Sativa for daytime clarity and activity.
Smoke lasts less than 1 hour in contrast to edible 5 hours.
Over the years we have found which strains work best.
Medical grade cannabis is regulated and consistent.
As bad as it may sound, treat her like a toddler trying to have bad eating habits, sneak in the "good for you" foods
The visiting nurse was here and favorably impressed with her appetite today.
Just wanted to slow her weight loss. It seems to be working.
Wish you the best of luck.
It says, "let them eat ice cream." Your mother can't help that her taste-buds have changed - I went through a period of months when all my DH would eat was Fish Sticks.
He also wanted Hot Cocoa every morning so I used Ensure Plus Chocolate with a little syrup in it. He was happy and he got 350 calories this way.
Remember, it's still food and eating anything is better than eating nothing.
However...how can I gently say...as one ages, our appetite naturally decreases...and especially, as the body begins to prepare for death.
Blessings to you and all that you do!
To be satisfied by a meal humans need 4 things : something salty, something sweet, something crunchy & I forget the 4th one but that is why restaurants serve sandwiches with pickles
You didn't say how old your mom is or what other health issues or where she lives [NH/AL] so we can't give anything specific to her situation - yes hind-sight is 20/20 & we all realize looking back what issues should have been red flags but didn't ... I hope you & family aren't being hard on yourselves because there are thousands if not millions who are in the same boat
You are not alone in being unaware of the early signs. I work in senior living and I missed them in my own father. Virtually all of his money was frittered away by the time we stepped in. When we look back, it all looks so obvious, but when you're seeing little clues here and there, it often doesn't paint a whole picture.
Ironically, I can spot it in other people even at the earliest stages. Objectivity is certainly one reason, but the other is that our parents natural mode is to parent us, so they reflexively mask symptoms even when they are aware of them and troubled by them.
It is hard for the family to watch, but we tried our best.
Patience and gentleness worked best for us with him.