Dad had a stroke because of A Fib - blood clot. He had been independent up until this point. Walked everyday 6 to 10 blocks, no cane or walker. No salt diet, never smoked or drank alcohol, active social life. 97years old, 124 cholesterol, blood pressure 140/70. After stroke he can walk, talk, light eater, just some memory issues. Doctors put him on bp meds & cholesterol med. So now his blood pressure keeps going down to around 84/50. I feel it's the meds causing the low blood pressure. I keep asking what is the cause. Can't get clear answer. Well he is dehydrated - no the blood work does not show that. Does a 97 year old man need to take this medicine when all his life he never took any medicine?
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If I were 97 years old, however, I may skip the statin. As far as blood pressure everyone is different in what they can tolerate. I do agree that elderly folks need a higher BP for brain and organ perfusion.
Have a good heart to heart talk with whoever is prescribing the medications and tell them your concerns.
Please don’t abruptly discontinue BP meds as some need to be titrated down before being stopped.
There is no reason for a cholesterol med if ur under 200. A statin will effect them cognitively.
If his BP is that low - stop the BP medicine too.
One incident: he got pale, beating on his chest and said any one have a stethoscope. I got nurses, BP was dropping, put on IV and had an EKG. Ok 2 days later I finally get the doctor, I asked what happened? She explains and made the comment that it was his heart AFib , so I ask what made the BP drop, she says oh his BP was ok --- No I looked at my notes is was 84/50!!
Play...
Checkers, and any games he likes, I could literally see improvement with each game of Checkers. Make sure games are “easy” enough that he doesn’t get stressed out, and just sees this as fun. Rummicub is great since he likes cards- and working with the “tiles” is good for fine motor skills. Go to the movies (discuss afterward). Take him to beautiful places where he can watch birds. Play music from his era (easy through Amazon). The music will take ten years off!
Do things that Improve hand-eye coordination (table tennis?)
Try to help him get some exercise every day. We would go to the shopping mall. In the beginning, we would walk and sit on every bench. He was holding onto me like a walker. That meant we would walk 20 feet, sit down for 10 minutes get up walk 20 feet. He started saying, “let’s keep going” and we would skip a bench. In about a month we worked up to two miles without stopping. Walking at the mall was nice because the temperature was constant, the floor surface was perfectly smooth and safe. He got Vans (skateboarding shoes). Their smooth, flat, solid, large sole promotes balance. He loved all the “cool shoes” comments and he looked sharp! If your dad is a veteran, get him one of those nice caps - he’ll get friendly interactions and “thank yous” from strangers that will lift his spirits and make him feel valuable and appreciated.
My dad also liked using a stationary bike, and that was nice because he didn’t have to focus on balancing, like he did when when walking
I’m so happy for you that you have this time together! You are so lucky.
Enjoy!
Was that cholesterol reading before or after the meds? As I'm sure you know, it certainly doesn't seem to need intervention. The blood pressure is a teensy bit higher than ideal, I believe? - but in a 97 year old, surely any tinkering with it needs to be done with extreme caution.
The thing is, the px seems standard, what you would expect; but your father is not a standard patient. All I can say is if it were me, I would go to his established GP (if he has one you're happy with) or back to his cardiologist/attending physician, and say the equivalent of "not happy, what are we doing, could we go back to the drawing board please." With as much polite jumping up and down and snarling as necessary.
Changes have to be clinically justified in each individual patient, not just made for their own sake. Make them concentrate on *him*.