My sister and I are heartbroken that we cannot seem to provide any love, comfort or just distraction for my mom when we visit. I am a nurse and feel I was good at handling her dementia until now.
As soon as my sister and I arrive to see her she starts trying to get up and get away from us. We try to distract her, change the subject, back off etc to no avail. This always progresses to her hitting and slapping us. She pulls hair, kicks, bites and has even closed fist punched me in the face. She swears, accuses us of stealing money, killing babies etc. we have talked to the staff for suggestions, tried different times of day, and different places to sit. There is not one shred of her personality left. She has over the years been on many medications but is a huge fall risk and we walk the line of safety verses over sedation.(last month she had 11 falls) I am not a cry baby but leave there in tears and just miss her so much. She will not let me hug or touch her affectionately in any way.
Does anyone have any experiences like this? I just want to love and comfort her but she hates me and I end up doing the opposite. Our relationship before dementia was exceptionally warm and loving.
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.
Can you ask at the facility if they might have or know of a support group? They do help.
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.
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.
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))))
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.
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.
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.