I seriously don't know what that actor from Back to the Future has done that has kept his Parkinson's manageable.
Because in less than 5 years, I have watched Parkinson's agressively destroy my Mom's personality & independence.
She has every single symptom you can find in a medical textbook: dyskinesia +++ , unsteady gait, always tired, eyes always closing, mask face, freezing episodes (oh the freezing episodes I hate those), urinary incontinence.
Somedays she engages in good conversation....others not.
Completely unpredictable.
Medications ? Forget it.....everytime the doctor increases her medication, the positive effects are short lived.
The first time they increased her levocarbidopa, she showed improvement for 6 months.
The second time they increased it, she was good for 4 months
Last month they increased it to 4x a day ....and already it's like it has no effect on her.
Nothing is working!
And the worst part is how random her "episodes" happen.
My Mom just had a doctor's visit, and she was perfectly responsive an hour ago.
Now my Dad's called and said she's in the middle of a freezing spell and he can't get her to respond.
I don't know what else to do.
I give up.
I almost feel like she fighting us
(...I know she's not, obviously...but still...).
It was only last week, My Mom was admitted to the hospital for feeding difficulties....and they couldn't find anything physically wrong with her.
3 specialist saw her, and they all said it was just the progression of her Parkinson's.
I'm a doctor myself, and I've spent so much of my savings, trying to help my Mom. I haven't even gone to specialize....and nothing works!
I'm not even angry at the other doctors...because I know, how it is. They haven't come up with any alternative diagnosis for her.
And me? Well I'm just a GP, if the specialists don't have an alternate diagnosis...then I ....just ....don't know what else can be done.
My Mom was a very independent woman. She used to drive, run a business, was actively involved in planning all family activities, exercised regularly, lived a healthy life ....now she can hardly do anything and she's not even 70 !
Oh and did I mention the fact that my Mom always having some medical emergency, makes me feel like I'm always working !
I love my Mom......sigh.
Have you contacted a neurologist, or someone who specializes in PD? I wonder if this is a rapidly progressing form of PD?
I'm sorry to learn of this challenge and unsettling progress in your mother's help.
Have you had her neurologist check her for that? If not, I certainly would.
I've have several friends who's spouses had both LBD and Parkinson's and they also had a lot of the symptoms you're describing, so that might be worth looking into.
I wish you the very best in getting the answers you are looking for.
Yes, the carbidopa/levodopa only works for so long at treating the symptoms. My MIL tried everything but at her age she was not a candidate for deep brain stimulation.
As for Michael J. Fox, he was a lot younger than your mom or my MIL when he was diagnosed. And who knows where he sought treatment or how many $$$millions he has spent.
My MIL chose to live her life on her terms and that's also what she did toward the end of her life. She accepted her illness. She made herself a DNR/DNI and refused a PEG tube and any heroic measures to prolong her life.
My MIL didn't have a lot of medical emergencies and so I'm wondering what you mean by your mom always having some medical emergency.
That said, I'm sorry you and your mom are going through such a difficult time with PD, and that she's been hit with a vicious form of it at a young age. And that you, as a doctor, can't really DO anything to help cure her. That must be a very frustrating place for you to be in right now, I would imagine. We all look to doctors to have 'all the answers', yet in many cases, they don't.
Take dementia, for example. As far as we've come in the medical field, the brain still remains a mystery, for the most part. My mother is 94 and I listen to her babbling about all sorts of nonsense, thanks to the advanced dementia that's wreaking havoc on her brain. When I worked in a Memory Care ALF in 2019, I dealt with doctors, lawyers and engineers who were all residents there, afflicted with advanced dementia & Alzheimer's, since disease knows no intellectual levels/educational levels, social standings, or income levels. It's an equal opportunity destroyer of everything that's good in a person's life, and in the family's life too. In my mother's case, she always ate healthy foods, exercised, never smoked/drank booze to excess, and led a healthy lifestyle in general, which didn't help her one bit in avoiding dementia!
We all love our family members who are afflicted with disease, and we all feel helpless to 'fix' things for them too, for the most part, b/c we're all bit players in the game of life. That includes you, even as a doctor, b/c there's no cure for PD, unfortunately. To sit back and watch your mother deteriorate before your eyes, and to be helpless to fix it, is a horrible thing. Just as it is for me. My mother also has pretty bad non-diabetic neuropathy in her legs/feet which has been a huge issue for the past 20+ years and is another thing the doctor's can't cure or even help her with very much, for the most part. Nerve damage is something that even pain meds don't help with, so there hasn't been a day gone by I haven't listened to her complaints of her legs 'killing her'. Hard to listen to, hard to go through, hard for everyone involved, even for her doctor who feels helpless to find her relief for. I hear it in her voice when she calls me to talk over my mother's care plan. TWO things she can't help mom with: dementia AND neuropathy, a double whammy. And she's taken 78 falls over the past few years, too, as a result of the neuropathy & resulting balance issues. Even now, in a wheelchair, she's still falling on a continual basis. Something else nobody can prevent.
Sometimes we 'children' just have to sit back & do nothing, realizing there is nothing we CAN do. If we've gone to the specialists and done all the tests, and they don't have 'the answer' for our mothers, then we have to leave the matter in God's hands & hope for the best. When it's time to involve hospice for pain management and comfort care, then that's the route to take, I guess. It's good to have a place like AgingCare to come to and vent; I know it's helped me over the years to know I'm not alone with my struggles. It helped me to read your post because I can relate to how you feel, exactly, and I can empathize with you 100% too.
Wishing you the best of luck with a difficult situation.
As an ICU RN, I usually work through nursing diagnoses that align with medical diagnoses. Seems your mom needs nutritional support, mobility help, pain management with muscle relaxers, and maybe some support for you and your dad as you journey through this tough disease.
I took care of my parents for many years. I also spent numerous hours in nursing homes, skilled nursing and met many caregivers along the way.
I see many levels of denial in family members (me too). We have a difficult time watching our parents age and diseases progress. As time moves on and reality begins to slap us in the face, we chip away at the walls of denial.
So, start with yourself. The problem is not your mom. She’s spiraling into disease progression. She won’t be better. The best you can do is hope for spurts of stability.
Allow yourself to accept her present status.
I know it's a long journey, but there are many medications that can be used to help control symptoms. The two sources of information I trust is the Parkinson’s foundation and michael j fox foundation. There are alot of resources and info, as well as webinars, that will help and guide you along the way.
Take care of yourself first and then you will find the strength to help her. God bless you!