I have been caregiver for my Mother-in-law for almost 2 years now and she has never come right out and asked someone who they are when she did not know them. I have a sister-in-law who recently is acting like she has dementia, however, when she sees us (been her sister-in-law for 30+ years) she asks everyone in my brother’s family who we are and then says she is happy to meet us. She tells tells me my brother has taken her to her mom and dad’s grave and so on and so forth. She is on a lot of meds for various health reasons. My question is have any other dementia caregivers had their loved one ask who someone is if they don’t recognize them? My MIL doesn’t want anyone to know that she doesn’t recognize them and has never asked someone who they are, we were at my sister in laws granddaughter wedding yesterday and she asked EVERYONE who they were and told them she was glad to meet them. I’m wandering if this is all med induced.
I don't think it's uncommon. We are all different as people, so when are brain is dieing we are all different also.
To me it's actually kind of sweet
If so, then this is common. In fact dementia patients may forget even husbands and children.
It took my daughter by surprise at Christmas when she came home to see us. She was sad that her Grandma didn’t know her. But it’s the disease.
so yes, that is something a person with Dementia says.
Good luck
I've also had people come up to me and say they met me at such/such place and I never have been there or even close. I often wonder if I have a doppelganger.
That's life. Unless they are causing trouble, go along with it, and allow the other person to keep their pride and enjoy/make the most of, the interaction.
Is there another reason that you are worried this is something avoidable, such as side effects of the meds she's on? For example, has the loss of memory come on suddenly?
However, this may seem uncharacteristic to you, whereas her close family may have seen the changes happen over a period of time. People in our extended family saw my mum on good days, so some relatives were shocked when Mum started to exhibit more obvious dementia traits.
If your SiL hasn't been evaluated for dementia, then it could be something else, but please be assured that both your SiL and MiL are handling their memory loss in classic ways, just differently. There is no one way with dementia, and unpredictability is really the only certainty.
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