My mom's memory care manager called me this afternoon and mom has been experiencing some bladder issues, and she wanted me to bring some type of incontinence brief and adult wipes tomorrow. She said that she was experiencing some bladder leakage, not that she didnt go to the bathroom. She has mixed dementia, vascular and Alzheimer's based on Brian MRI, so I guess this is another step down that path. I asked about whether it could be a UTI, but says no signs of that, no extra frequency or pain.
When she was home with me, there were occasional problems, usually from maybe waiting too long, and then oh, I need to hurry and just not making it. She never wet the bed, but I would occasionally find a wet spot on the floor like she got up to go and was disoriented and didnt make it, and twice she actually peed in the trash can! ( haven't figured that one out yet)
So what I am trying to figure out is which product to get. I dont think the described problem requires any max absorbency right now if she just needs the protection of occasional leaks and waiting too long. But she really doesn't understand the degree of her memory problems (shevwas wearing her coat inside the other day when I video called her, and she told me that she had just gotten home from work), so I dont envy them getting her to wear it. She is SUPER finicky about her underwear, I know because I've had to go store to store shopping with her. It cant be too tight on waist, legs cant bind, must be cotton, not nylon.. Product cant be scented, she's sensitive to that kind of thing.
She's 5 1", 125 lbs, and does carry some weight in her stomach area. But she purposely buys size 9 underwear, granny style briefs, no bikini, no hip hugger. I weigh a 100 lbs more than her, and wear a size smaller. So I dont know how we are going to get a brief she wont think is tight, yet is snug enough to work properly.
For now at least I need to take them something available in stores; I've seen some positive reviews of a product called Willow, but it's only mail order.
Definitely get the UTI thing checked. We had an older friend who had no pain, no urinary frequency, but was suddenly forgetful and combative. It was all from a UTI, and she was back to herself again once it cleared up.
Which disposable briefs are comfortable for your mother is an individual preference and one you'd have no way of knowing. What works for one may not work for another. I buy my mother Depends and she complains a lot about them, so I've tried other brands which she complains even MORE about. If/when she runs out, the Memory Care ALF supplies her with the brand they use, which she really hates. My point? Buy her whatever brand you'd like and the ALF will deal with the issues that crop up. She can't wear huge size disposable briefs or they will be very uncomfortable, not to mention they will not contain the urine and it will leak out the leg portion which defeats the entire purpose. When you go to the store, check the size chart to determine which size will fit your mother best. All the products on the market are pretty much 'max absorbency' because when an adult urinates, even once, they NEED maximum absorbency! Depends makes an overnight brief which is thicker/heavier but she wouldn't need such a thing until/unless wetting the bed frequently becomes an issue. Then there are quite a few options for products you can buy her to combat that problem.
Good luck!
First let's talk about a UTI. There doesn't have to be extra frequency or pain, it's an infection that could only be verified by a urine test done by a lab. If your Mom has a UTI that could cause extra confusion, strange behavior, etc. It's a good idea to rule a UTI out.
As far as briefs, my Mom is 5'2 and weighs 121 pounds. I buy her either Depends or Always (Walmart sells them) and I buy her a size Medium. She is very happy with either one (the Always brand is prettier with a design where Depends is a beige color).
I suggest the size Medium based on your Mom's height and weight. And my Mom has a belly too and the Medium fits perfect in both brands.
Hope this helps,
Jenna