What are the Stages of Alzheimer’s Disease? Symptoms of Late-to-End-Stage Alzheimer’s Disease

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  • Опубліковано 23 сер 2024

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  • @dougcropper7693
    @dougcropper7693 Рік тому +16

    I appreciate your comment "no one has survived Alzheimer's"
    My wife is in late stage (not the dying stage) & she is only 60 years old. Things keep changing almost every month. She is not independent at all.
    Alzheimer's is a terrible, relentless disease

  • @user-um9sl1kj6u
    @user-um9sl1kj6u 9 місяців тому +5

    To be able to help with hospice care, is an honor and a privilege.
    Always

  • @kathrynemason1673
    @kathrynemason1673 Рік тому +14

    My mother has mental health issues, always has, and the dementia has left us with the worst facets of her personality. All the things she kept a lid on in public and a little at home, are now on full display as the social barriers we all put in place have disappeared. There is nothing nice about caring for her. I've looked after people with various dementias for years, fortunately, so have a perspective on what is happening and how things are progressing. She would be a horribly disruptive influence in a care facility but requires 24 hr care, so my husband and I have moved in to her house for the duration. It's often soul destroying but I know she is as well as she can be, always clean and well hydrated. That's all we can do. Sending love to anyone caring for a relative.

    • @vidishish829
      @vidishish829 Рік тому +1

      God Bless your loving compassion

    • @mikerhoades6129
      @mikerhoades6129 Рік тому +1

      I feel for you. Caring for wife at late mid stage. Now getting help from caregivers at a facility, as they often know how to respond properly vs our untrained response.

    • @kathychapman2350
      @kathychapman2350 2 місяці тому +1

      Difficult af best, I've a similar story caring for my narcissistic mother at home dying of cancer. Very challenging, but the relief I felt when she passed was huge. No more struggling for her either, finally af peace.

    • @kathrynemason1673
      @kathrynemason1673 2 місяці тому

      Every morning I hope she's gone in the night, but as of today, she's still here and somehow, still trying to manipulate. It's blindingly obvious of course but still wearing. Doubly incontinent, liquid diet as she can't chew, shocking mobility but still trying to play people off against each other. It's as if it's the core of her personality.

  • @JCourts2k23
    @JCourts2k23 2 роки тому +18

    Thank you for your video, my 72-year-old dad he’s going through this, and I believe he’s in the late stages, it’s so heartbreaking

  • @cort35
    @cort35 Рік тому +1

    . My 82-year-old mother is exhibiting most, if not all of the near-to-late-to-end stages that you listed. Thank you, Dr. for not only giving me much-needed information, but also peace of mind.

  • @suzankephart8461
    @suzankephart8461 Рік тому +3

    My mother is 91, she was diagnosed with dementia about 8 years ago. I think she had signs slowly show about 1 year before. A couple years later my Dad got in a car wreck with my Mom.
    She had some broken ribs. While running test they found she had lymphoma. The doctors convinced my Dad to put her on Chemo. She took 3 treatments and nearly died. She was in the nursing home for rehab after that. My Dad was also in the nursing home in rehab for pneumonia at the same time..
    At this time my Mom was already in diapers, she had no control of herself.
    If she tried to talk, she would stumble and sputter her words. She talked about her Mom and Dad like she was back in those days. She didn't know our names. She called my daughter that girl. She called my Dad that guy. It was funny she was sitting in her recliner one day, and she asked my Dad if he had a wife. He told her yeah i got a wife and my Mom said well, where is she?
    My daughter started helping my Dad because he had major heart issues, Dad died March 12, 2021. Just short of his 95 birthday. Mom never noticed he was gone.
    My daughter moved in with my Mom as her full time caretaker.
    My Mom is also a diabetic, she has arthritis.
    My daughter has given all her attention to Mom. It has not been easy. One day Mom was giving her a hard time, sometimes she gets pretty bad. My daughter got really stern with her. She told her if she didn't behave she was going to tickle her feet.
    Mom yelled you better not. She grabbed her foot and i never heard my Mom laugh so loud. That was all it took, her mood changed and she was just as sweet. We have some good memories. My daughter's granddaughter is there a
    lot, she plays with Mom. Sometimes when i come over she is sitting on the arm of Mom's recliner and they are telling secrets and talking. She has grandma, great grandma and great great grandma there with her. Lucky little girl.
    Through all of this time Mom has had UTI, which has caused a problem. She has been on antibiotics for about 3 years. When that infection starts to get bad we know it because her dementia is off the chart. And the sugar goes up rapldly. She would chew on blankets, talk to the walls, even stay up 2 days straight. Unbelievable!
    She would never complain about pain, if you asked she would always say she was fine. She ended up going to the hospital and she was septic. She pulled through it. Yet, Mom had a rash that my daughter had been worried about and that rash turned out to be shingles. Right on one side of the diaper area. Up one side of her back.
    So Mom went back to rehab in the nursing home in quarantine.
    Through all of this Mom has always gotten up on her walker with help to go to the bathroom, to eat at the dinner table, she eats and drinks by herself. Now when she eats and drinks you have to keep reminding her or she will just wonder off and just sit there.
    Mom has been on and off of hospice 3 times. We just got her back on a couple of months ago.
    Now my daughter has been telling the hospice nurse that she thinks that infection is still there.
    This last month she has went downhill.
    Everytime i come to my Mom's in the morning she would be at the breakfast table. I would walk over and lightly place my hand on her back and she would slowly turn her head. I would give her my biggest smile and say Good Morning and her face would just light up. It was heartbreaking this morning she couldn't say Good Morning or even smile.
    The day before my daughter had to call an ambulance for her, her sugar was 378
    Well, the hospice lady came to the hospital and said that she was just end of time and she had been crying for days. Which she had not been crying for days. Her report said nothing about her diabetes.
    Just that she was end of time.The hospital had put her on an IV of fluids and intervenous antibiotics because she did have another infection. Yet, the hospital did not admit her after the hospice turned in their report, did not stabilize her sugar. Hospice made no mention on their report that she was diabetic. I don't understand, the ambulance had been called for a critically high sugar level.
    The last time she got sick like that the hospice lady that came to the hospital told my brother Mom would be dead in 2 weeks.
    That was a year and a half ago.
    My daughter and i were pretty upset. And the hospice asked my daughter what do you want extensive care? That did not go over well with me. I found it insulting. After all these years of struggling with Mom we know there is no cure, that she can't be fixed. She is getting close.
    But why let her get septic?
    The hospice nurse that came to the house a couple of weeks ago told my daughter there was no use in doing blood work or urine test because by the time the results came back it would be too late.
    Am i wrong? We just want Mom to be comfortable. Should we just put Mom in bed and give her morphine. That is pretty much what they suggest. Are we prolonging things? Are we stretching out her sickness.
    Do we not think God will take her when it's
    her time?
    Very hard!

  • @bq6950
    @bq6950 Рік тому +8

    My sister is 62 years old with late stage Alzheimer's. Diagnosed 5 years ago at stage 4. Probably stage 6 now. Plus she has epilepsy. Her vocabulary has shrunk and her appetite too, she's lost a lot of weight in a year . I'm her 24-7 carer at her home and completely exhausted. Last November I started bringing in carers/sitters for 2 hr sessions. My mother had Alzheimer's too and I fear I will get it . I wish someone could tell me how much longer she will suffer.😢

    • @annacarter8703
      @annacarter8703 Рік тому +2

      Just keep praying and try hiring someone to help you out. You also if you want too find a facility that handle Alzheimer's. Only God knows how long it's going to last. My mom was in the nursing home for 9 years at first she was home it was like everyday the ambulance was at the house. We put her in a nursing home not too far . But I came almost everyday to bathe her go to her doctor appointment. She end up dieing but she waited for me within 15 minutes she pass in front of me . The nurse said your mom kept calling my name. But at the end I felt peace. Because I was there for her.

    • @randompoigon4583
      @randompoigon4583 Рік тому

      It Depends on what dementia she got if it’s normal like Alzheimer’s disease then she might have at least 1 years or some thing (I’m not a doctor or an expert in dementia)
      The chances of getting dementia increase as you get older because you’re hippocampus (the part of the brain that controls memory) gets smaller and smaller as you grow older because dementia is basically plaque that builds up in the brain that causes the brain to become smaller and smaller until it finally just… loses its self

    • @abowling5759
      @abowling5759 2 місяці тому

      😢

  • @katherinewillis195
    @katherinewillis195 2 роки тому +5

    I keep hearing about difficulty swallowing in late stage Alzheimer’s, my grandmother live until she was 93 with Alzheimer’s, she never had a problem swallowing, her brother had Alzheimer’s also, he never had difficulty swallowing. My mother is stage 6, but declining I think she is close to stage 7 but she does not have any issues with swallowing.

    • @hinmin12
      @hinmin12 Рік тому +2

      Each case is different from the other. This is the surprising thing about this scary disease.

  • @kevinnasky771
    @kevinnasky771 3 роки тому +3

    Thank you. There’s a dearth of info about the late stages of dementia.

  • @user-qx3rw8fl6t
    @user-qx3rw8fl6t 11 місяців тому

    THANK YOU, Dr. Melissa, for sharing your expertise, your wisdom, and your Love. Of course you can acertain, we are doing with a family member with Dementia. Your kind advisement, is helping us alot. God Bless You.

  • @ai-ym7gw
    @ai-ym7gw 11 місяців тому

    Thank you for this video. My dad is 78 years old and is going through late stage I think. A caregiver is with him 24hrs.

  • @danbarosh2942
    @danbarosh2942 2 роки тому +10

    Thank you Doc It was a great presentation...You were right on target from the get go...Wife 77y was diag with alz a little over year ago...Definitely in last stage..Been a good eater all along until last few days Cant seem to swallow anything but liquid and not doin well with that...We scrambling tryin to get pills in her..anyway your presentation was WOW and as pleasant and understandable to even a country boy..THANK YOU

    • @vidishish829
      @vidishish829 Рік тому

      Grind her Meds and mix with apple sauce

  • @lauriedwyer3923
    @lauriedwyer3923 3 роки тому +4

    Thank you!

  • @pamabbey3057
    @pamabbey3057 3 роки тому +1

    Just thanks for everything. You are so calm. I appreciate that. It helps so much for me to understand what happened. Both my late husband with LBD and my role, as a caregiver

  • @pairofdot
    @pairofdot Рік тому +1

    To think that one day my family could forget who I am. It’s such a horrifying thought.

  • @lesiahmaduna3765
    @lesiahmaduna3765 Рік тому +1

    I'm very happy for this information my aunt has got it l thankyou

  • @ddutton4716
    @ddutton4716 3 роки тому +3

    Do you have an opinion on the value of the Bredesen methods for MCI? Another great video. Regards

    • @Omar_Zazzle
      @Omar_Zazzle 2 місяці тому

      I watched that video and it was complete nonsense.

  • @hinmin12
    @hinmin12 Рік тому

    My father in law, 93 with dementia, sits with water in his mouth. We have to remind him to swallow it. He eats a rice and lentils porridge kind of dish (khichri) mashed eggs and oatmeal. He is fainting regularly with plunging blood pressure. He is totally dependent on others for toilet needs. He gets severe constipation every week. But he can still walk with a walker stiffly. What stage would you call this?
    My mother,91, died with dementia 4 months ago. She got pneumonia.

  • @monalisadavinci8086
    @monalisadavinci8086 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you!!! 🌹🌹🌹

  • @JenniferFordEsq
    @JenniferFordEsq 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you for easy to understand explanations. How do you feel about the study about 40 Hz sound and flickering lights from Emory University? And, also the one ongoing in Salt Lake City? It seems to show just light and sound- without medication- decreased the plaque and improved symptoms.

    • @shellyhambleton959
      @shellyhambleton959 2 роки тому

      I live in SLC. What specifically are you mentioning that is in Utah? I have early Alteimers and need to find help

  • @eidetic-mo6pl
    @eidetic-mo6pl 2 роки тому +3

    How do you help the person when they are screaming (just about anything) at the top of their lungs for long periods of time? It's very sad, and I'd like to help the caregiver cope and help her calm down. It appears she's in the end stage of dementia. ( I'm a friend of the caregiver.)

    • @mikerhoades6129
      @mikerhoades6129 Рік тому

      Sorry to hear that, it is so hard to help sometimes and caregivers are only human. Maybe if patient misbehaved, threaten with tickling the feet as suggested elsewhere.
      Might get them laughing?

  • @harichard6366
    @harichard6366 3 роки тому +1

    Hello, Dr. With the recent approval of Aduhelm, and the new studies that say Immunomodulatory Treatment can stop the progression of Alzheimer's in primates. How close do you think we are to having a viable treatment or even completely curing Alzheimer's?

  • @anaanna1075
    @anaanna1075 2 роки тому

    Thank you.

  • @amandaallen9460
    @amandaallen9460 2 роки тому +1

    My Grammy (mom's mom) has been diagnosed with mild approaching moderate Alzheimer's as of a month ago...we just took her driving privileges away a week ago

    • @vidishish829
      @vidishish829 Рік тому

      My mom stopped driving 5 years ago, this month she is having difficulty walking and eating. The only speech is the word “yeah”. Im not sure if she will be with us next year.

  • @veenakakkad1451
    @veenakakkad1451 3 роки тому +4

    What about the bedsores...how to tackle that!

    • @saleembaloch2593
      @saleembaloch2593 Рік тому +2

      Bedsores can be treated by changing position every two hrs.as well apply sodo cream best healers for bedsores

  • @beatricesiaw8776
    @beatricesiaw8776 3 роки тому +2

    Can we get a cure from this??!??

  • @YinTeing1
    @YinTeing1 3 роки тому +1

    Since last month, my mom was sent to hospital 3 times, out of which she was hospitalized twice. From mid stage Alzheimher's, she rapidly progressed to end stage, with dificulty swallowing. This resulted in severe dehydration and malnutrition. Her bp could not be detected and heart rate was faint.
    I really could not let her die like that. And the doctors in the hospital all recommend intubation. At the second hospitalization, we had a nose tube placed to feed her. To prevent her from pulling out, which yes, she did manage to do it once at the hospital, we had hand mittens restraints that cover all her fingers. In the hospital she was tied to the bed, and thankfully did not panic or suffer. She just looked puzzled why her hand looked different.
    We changed the bed at home to hospital bed, bought an oxygen concentrator to give her supplemental oxygen, and a phelgm suction machine.
    Fortunately the hospital also sells the specially blended diet for tube feeding. Initially she looked so weak and seemed would not make it. Then about 2 weeks, she is starting to regain more energy after the doctor prescribed Fluimucil to dilute the thick mucus that often blocked her airway.
    If we did not have the tube in, she would have died in her sleep probably last month. After putting the tube, few times the thick mucus nearly choked her which medication and having phelgm sucked out really helps and she slowly regained her strength. Now, I need not force her to eat or drink, I just pass it thru her nose tube. And she is not in any form of distress.

    • @glamsky3257
      @glamsky3257 2 роки тому +1

      How long her live will be extended with this method?

    • @YinTeing1
      @YinTeing1 2 роки тому +1

      @@glamsky3257 hi, there is no definite answer as it depends on the level of care and if any complication. Their condition is similar to some stroke and ALS patients who are placed on feeding tube when they lose ability to swallow. I have known of 2 stroke patients on NG tube who only lived for a few mths. They passed from choking on their own hardened saliva and phlegm. And others who could live for more than 10 years. I have learned from my mom's doctors, nurses and ALS forums that phlegm suction needs to be done regularly if they cannot swallow nor spit out their saliva and phlegm. My mom has been on the tube for 9 months and her health in terms of her bp, cholesterol and blood sugar have definitely improve compared to the time she was eating by mouth (she was a picky eater).

    • @vidishish829
      @vidishish829 Рік тому +3

      I respect your love and commitment to extend her life but what kind of life is that? Maybe hospice care would be more humane?

    • @YinTeing1
      @YinTeing1 Рік тому

      @@vidishish829 actually, there are many adults on feeding tube because of different health reasons. In fb you can find these groups, some of them public. For them, no one mentioned about hospice or suffering.
      Come this June, it would be 2yrs that my mom is on NG tube. To people who came to visit and doctors and nurses who check on her, no one felt she was suffering. But I had been asked if I, as the caregiver is suffering as they felt it was tough for me. But it has been the most meaningful thing I have ever done in my life. My mom is just like a happy, cheerful baby. Alzheimer's took away all the painful memories and self protective mechanism she had build to survive a tough life.
      However it is important to note that if they are placed in nursing home, yes they will suffer because there need to be dedicated care or else the risk of aspiration is very high which is the same situation if the person has ALS or stroke.

  • @user-um9sl1kj6u
    @user-um9sl1kj6u 9 місяців тому

    I think it’s important for the local priest to visit. And not just some person that they assign. It needs to be someone they know Or is a part of the church that they know

  • @beatricesiaw8776
    @beatricesiaw8776 3 роки тому +2

    Are hallucinations associated with alziehmers?

    • @luisacalderon717
      @luisacalderon717 3 роки тому +2

      My mom’s neurologist says yes

    • @narasimhacharic
      @narasimhacharic 2 роки тому +2

      Yes ..my mom in law often hallucinates and she is in the middle stage of alzheimers

    • @booboo61
      @booboo61 2 місяці тому

      Yes. They are.

  • @anndrake492
    @anndrake492 2 роки тому +3

    We are ALL working ALL the time! Nobody has the money ($10,000/ mo) or the time OR ENERGY to be a 24x7 caregiver!

  • @nataliedy8093
    @nataliedy8093 5 місяців тому

    Please discuss parkinson 's disease
    Thank you

    • @MelissaBPhD
      @MelissaBPhD  4 місяці тому

      I recently released an episode about Parkinson’s Disease Dementia. What would you like to know about Parkinson’s Disease?

  • @Frank-ky8bk
    @Frank-ky8bk Рік тому

    Can anyone do a video on this topic with out being so boring that watching grass grow is a three ring circus by comparison

  • @jaquancolt2792
    @jaquancolt2792 3 роки тому

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