I live with my mother, who has advancing dementia and the most unreal, surreal, completely out of nowhere delusions and hallucinations. I could never in my wildest dreams have imagined the things she comes up with. And they are all horrible. My sister and I are building some kind of torture structure in the backyard to kill her in terrible ways. There are people in the house who are going to kill her. My sister puts things in her ears at night so she can't hear. Etc.
In answer to similar questions about how to handle this, many posters have offered suggestions like check for UTI, get her on medication, redirect her and so on. None of these things work. Believe me, I've tried them all. (She is on Seroquel, which probably helps to a degree; who knows how bad it would be without it?) It also doesn't work to try to tell her these things aren't happening to her. I know this, but sometimes I can't stop myself and I lose my patience way too often. At the suggestion of another poster, I'm carrying a worry stone, in my case a small glass heart. Holding onto it for dear life gives me a moment to take a breath and calm myself down when things go completely off the rails.
I would love to hear from anyone who is dealing with a combative, impossible to redirect LO who is having hallucinations and delusions that go so far beyond the garden variety "somebody stole my purse" that they might as well be from Planet Xenon. In the meantime, I am carrying my worry stone with me at all times.
WARNING: There may be a slightly increased risk of serious, possibly fatal side effects such as stroke, heart failure, fast/irregular heartbeat, pneumonia, when this mediation is used by older adults with dementia. This medication is not approved for the treatment of dementia-related behavior problems.
My mom is 88. I stopped it immediately and made an appointment with a geriatrist. Her appointment is tomorrow. Be careful what meds they prescribe. I don't believe they always care enough.
P.s. My mother also showed signs of Parkinson's with the shaking hands and hallucinations. So try the Neurologist because they're experienced in anything neurological. Her medications were for the dementia and lots of pain meds. She also had a pill at night that was supposed to help her sleep but it rarely did its job. Put alarms on your doors and use the camera monitoring systems...they help
I hugged mom and loved her
mom always settled down when I
prayed in her ear and cuddled her
I wish I could do that again
The ER each time would give him different meds to combat the "hallucinations" but usually antibiotics and an iv drip would do the trick.
But yes - all too aware of how "real" these are - talk to her doctor.
Lavender is a wonderful calming oil, Bergmot is great to offset depression.
CBD oil is another fantastic supplement that helps with everything from pain to anxiety, with zero side effects.
There are so many essential oils that have great benefits if used correctly. Do some research and give them a try. It’s much safer than all the pharmaceuticals which are probably adding to the problem.
I truly believe it’s all the drugs that seniors are pumped up with are the problem, and no doctor is going to tell you otherwise. It’s effects their bottom line. Plus, when you have a patient seeing multiple docs for multiple ailments you end up with some deadly life altering pharmaceutical cocktails. And this doesn’t even begin to cover mistakes made in nursing homes giving patients the wrong meds.
For example take a good look at statins. If you do your research you’ll find that they cause memory problems and lead to dementia. Just saying.
IMHO the less pharmaceuticals the better, in fact zero pharmaceuticals is best.
It doesn't help to tell her these things aren't true. She is to the point of cursing, she has thrown drinks in someone's face, she cries out and yells.
I can only redirect for just a little while. She goes right back to the hallucination and delusion. The best redirect I have found is either getting her to look at Instagram or finding music she really likes.
I like the idea of the worry stone. I need something as well and will try that.
I hope you find something and as I learn I will share, hoping we can both find help.
When his dementia didn't clear after the leg infection and got to the end of the spectrum, they tested for UTI. Negative. No elevated temperature or signs of other infection.
He had a contusion on his side from a fall. It turned out to be abscessed. After debridement surgery, his dementia fizzled out over one week. Our original dad's thinking has returned.
You with her accusing you and your sister of the torture device have it a little harder. I would suggest you tell her that you guys are going to take it down and burn the wood. Then if you are able to have a small bonfire and toast marshmallows with her. Make a better memory for her. This may or may not work, it usually did for my father until the next time something came up. The key is to remain calm and speak to her softly and gently, listen to her fear and make up a lie that will reassure her that you will take care of it.
I think I'm just in for it as long as this lasts. I'm getting better at managing my own impatience (and anger, if I'm honest). This forum provides so much support. I thank you all.
I was in your situation a year ago, my mom had a stroke 16 years a go, and has been a decline ever since (now 86). We went through a lot of hospital stays, rehab facilities and a geri psych as you mentioned. There were the "someone took all of my money", instances, "look at all of the moths on the wall", nothing there, and the list goes on. It is very scary at times, the mid is playing tricks on them, but they think it is so real. As others have said, trying to reason with them only makes it worse. They get very defensive & agitated, that is usually when my mom flips me off & the swearing starts!
: ) She was not one to talk like that! They are a lot of nasty things that come out, but I try to only respond when she has something nice to say. Otherwise, I just change the subject. We had to put my mom in a nursing home last March ( almost a year) and she still "hates it" and tells me how horrible I am for "doing" this to her. Trying to explain it was doctor's orders does not help. It took me a long time to stop blaming myself and realize this was best for her & I. I know she is fed, safe & cared for. I couldn't be there 24 hours. I wish you the best. Use this forum as a tool. It has definitely helped me.
Second...don't tell her she is not seeing what she is seeing. Tell her she is seeing past the "veil" and what she sees cannot touch her. This gave my mom some peace.
Third...tell her to think of them as a bad or scary movie! Moma never bought that but she was sometimes entertained by them.
Fourth...don't always assume she is hallucinating. People do bad things to people who cannot protect themselves.
Lastly...I spoke with a doctor who worked with Charles Bonnet patients for 30 years. He astonished me by stating that no matter what the education level, job type, financial situation all of his patients had the SAME bizarre hallucinations about things they had never had an exposure to, experience with, or probably even read about. Hence why we started telling her she was seeing past the "veil". True...I don't know, but I do know it was the only thing that gave her any peace. Heartbreaking for sure! My prayers are with you!! Hope this helps a bit! Jean