I spent Christmas Eve (Tuesday) with Mom in the emergency room because of a second fall. She fell prior to Tuesday on Monday morning; I got the call Monday afternoon that she had a medium-size skin tear on her arm and her buttocks were bruised pretty bad. Thankfully, the ER trip revealed no broken bones. She fell on her right knee. Of course she cannot tell me or the AL staff what happened because she doesn't remember falling. The second time she fell, they found her sitting on the floor in her room.
Yesterday, Friday, I visited her and she said her side was sore. When I lifted her shirt, I gasped at what I saw! Her right side was a blackish-purple and it was wide-spread. Dang! Another fall? I wasn't sure and thought that it may be from the second fall, since it was only a few days ago.
At 10:00pm the AL called me and said that they were going to x-ray her side because she was complaining of it hurting and they were also going to take blood. X-ray revealed nothing broken. Mom takes Xarelto. The ER doctor was concerned about this and said if she falls and hits her head she could have a brain bleed, which would be bad. But, if she is taken off of Xarelto, she could have a heart attack, stroke, or develop a blood clot. Not good, too. ER doc advised that I talk with her doctor, which I am going to do next week.
I am noticing that Mom (84 with Vascular and Alzheimer's stage 6) is more unsteady when walking. She uses a cane and has for a number of years. A walker is useless to her as she doesn't understand how to maneuver it and she will not stay in a wheel chair.
I'm afraid more serious falls are inevitable. I don't know what to do about the Xarelto, either.
Sorry so lengthy. Please share your experiences with similar situations. I don't know what to do.
Many thanks.
This is not to say she will not fall again she will. It will be a matter of when, how bad and how often.
There are wheelchairs that can be configured so they are more difficult to get out of. My Husband had one that the seat tilted back a bit and the back reclined so if he wanted to get out of the chair it would have taken a LOT of effort.
Continuing the medication or discontinuing it. You will hear pros and cons on both. There are pros and cons to either option.
There is no Correct decision and there is no Wrong decision.
What I always said when making decisions for my Husband I am was being ruled by 2 organs in my body.
My Head
My Heart.
I always hoped my Head would "win" any argument (and for the most part it did)
Ask doctor/staff about falls vs xaralto. Which is the greater risk at this point? Hard to know and there isn't always a "right" answer. I would be inclined to go with less medication, all other things being equal.
So as far as being immobile - one family member did fine in a chair for several years, but my mom declined fairly rapidly when she got bed bound. Ended up getting pneumonia from ingesting liquids and food when she ate.
A walker was prescribed and he received training from an occupational therapist, but it was beyond his ability to learn it and know that it was his. Staff had him evaluated by Hospice and he went under their care August 2019. I watched and worried as he was then often in a wheelchair and I was afraid he was becoming close to being bedridden, as had happened to his mother.
I took him out for a car ride in early November. He was kinda out of it that day but did seem to enjoy the ride. When I returned to his Memory Care home, he could not stand to exit the car and I had to call a nurse to bring a wheelchair to get him inside. I gave him a hug and he was wheelchaired inside. That was Sunday afternoon. The following Tuesday morning at 6 AM I received a call that he had just died in his bed.
His mother had lingered for years bedridden and eventually blind in a mediocre nursing home 3,000 miles away from me. I know he never wanted to end up in that state (we had many late night discussions about it). I was relieved that he passed before reaching that stage.
That's my experience. Once his mobility began to wane, the last aspect of his life that brought any quality was disappearing. I think he gave up and was ready to go. I didn't really have time to grieve as I immediately had to turn my attention to my mother, who is a whole other horrid story. I have an appointment to start seeing a therapist this upcoming week, which is long overdue.
It's been a tough ride. Take care of yourself.
A trolley also has the advantage that you can trundle your personal possessions around on it.
Might be worth a try, but. I'm sorry this is happening.
Falls are scary!
She proceeded to have a stroke. Not a major stroke, but one that did cause another decline in cognizance and balance issues.
But the nosebleeds stopped.
My opinion is this: at some point, we have to STOP taking heroic life-saving measures with the elderly, especially when dementia is involved. Action A creates Consequence B, as indicated with the above story, so you're damned if you do and damned if you don't.
My mother is at a place now where she can't be prescribed many meds at ALL because they will create ANOTHER medical issue that cannot be treated. The PA thought she had another DVT last month..........the remedy is Xarelto. We can't give her that Rx for obvious reasons......see where I'm going with this? She did not have a DVT, by the way, as it turned out.
So it's Palliative Care options at this point. Keep her as comfy as possible with as FEW medications as possible. Keep the falls to a minimum, she's up to 40 now, and let God handle the rest. I personally feel that when her number is up, it's up. When it's her time to pass, she will, with meds, without meds, whether she falls or whether she doesn't. I'm about out of options at this point, and her dementia is ruining what's left of her life ANYWAY.
Wishing you the best of luck dealing with all of this...........I know how hard it all truly IS. Sending you a big hug, too
Did her nosebleeds stop shortly after going off the drug?
Next step was a Geri-recliner where Mom could sit and the recliner wasn't easy to get out. A nurse would place a pillow under her knees to make it even more difficult to stand up. Mom would be placed by the nursing station.