example......all of my life my mother has been unstable, violent behavior, very abusive physically and verbally. When she wants something she plays mind games to get want she wants. As an adult I pulled away from her. But the last year or so......see seems to display signs of dementia. When she wants you to do something and you don't have time.....she has these sudden trips to ER in ambulance and we run test after test, blood work and NOTHING is ever wrong, and the ER doc says dementia and starts talking to her about future care and when he leaves she is so mad and instantly her mind is perfect. We've had MRIs, under care of neurologist and family doctor, blood work. I am literally so confused. I want to help BUT if this is more manipulation I want to walk away from it for my own sanity. Advice/opinions?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudodementia.
Apparently the presentation of a major depressive episode can mimic some dementias. Has your mom been seen by a Geriatric Psychiatrist? Teasing out the symptoms can be difficult. Treatment can be effective.
Social withdrawal is apparently also one of the symptoms, Helen63!
Your mother isn't calling 911 and reporting that she thinks she has acute dementia. So what symptoms are prompting her (or others) to call an ambulance, and the paramedics to take her to hospital?
Based on your narrative, my guess is she's just ornery!
It really depends on the doctor and what qualifications s/he has or what kind of testing they actually do. A regular PCP or ER doc may not be able to tell or even notice whether there are signs of dementia. All too often in the early stages they can "show-time", where they can appear normal. Usually this can only work for shorter time frames, such as a doc appointment.
The only person ever to give my mother a real test was a nurse from the aide company we were going to hire. She did this in the home with YB and I present. She didn't upset mom by telling her anything and was very good at getting mom to do the test and going through it all!
Given that your mother already had manipulative skills, these can play into it as well. It will take a skilled medical person to do enough of a test to confirm whether your mother has dementia or not.
Any mention of ANYTHING regarding her ability to live alone (we NEVER used the "D" word) would set mom off. One doctor was trying to assess her, so she could write a letter I needed to become her pension rep (it was federal and NO federal agencies honor any POAs - they have their own determinations.) All she said to mom was that it wasn't safe for you to live alone. Oh boy, did she go off the rails!
Do you have any POAs in place? If so, perhaps you can talk with her regular doctor about getting an assessment? It might have to wait for her next ER emergency - perhaps he can have orders in place to admit her and get a full assessment. Otherwise, you may be on this roller-coaster ride for a while.
Is she safe? If yes, do nothing.
Is her lifestyle or living situation dangerous to her health? If no, do nothing.
You stayed away before. Why intervene now?
If ANYONE hinted at my mother that she had dementia, she would fly off the handle! She maintained that she was "fine, independent and could cook." She lived alone, so some of the very early signs were missed (or not understood as I knew almost nothing about dementia until she started making financial errors and repeating herself all the time, which is when I started my research.) After knowing this was early stages of dementia, we NEVER mentioned that word to her. In her mind it meant you were "off your rocker", aka crazy. That's not what dementia is, but for her it was.
I wouldn't dismiss some of this woman's issues being related to early dementia.
This is your answer.
Dementia doesn't usually make nasty, manipulative people nice, kind people. It makes what they are more obvious because they can't hide as well.
My mom tried to tell me that she was so happy that she lasted 2 years longer than her mom and grandmother before getting Alzheimer's. As soon as I said we need to find a facility that you will be happy about, she is totally fine. Yep, manipulation failure!
Don't question your knowledge in this situation, you know your mom. You know what she is capable of doing to get her way. Besides, dementia is called the long goodbye because these behaviors can last for several decades. So she is fine at this stage of things, it's only if she had a brain injury, like a stroke or a fall that things could literally change overnight.
You know that you need to protect yourself and I am saying that you need to continue to protect yourself, no matter what she is experiencing. She chose this path, don't get blindsided because she found your weakness.
My parents are always trying different tactics to find the button that will get me in line with their desires. They can't believe that I don't have one, I mean they instilled tons of them, I couldn't possibly be stronger and smarter than they were.
You have to decide what you will do for her in the worse case scenario and stick by your boundaries. She hasn't changed, beware!
Has your mother ever been seen by a geriatric psychiatrist to assess her needs?
I think that I would step away and allow the State to take over her care. It's very difficult to take care of an elder with both mental health issues and dementia.
Probably better if she is being care for by folks who can compel her compliance.