My Dad was diagnosed with AD four years ago. Sometimes my Mom and I discuss his symptoms, and she realizes that he exhibited some of them for years in ways that didn't really adversely affect his life, but that they are magnified now with his Alzheimer's. For example, my Dad was never good with directions or finding a location, even with a map. He didn't know east from west, or north from south. My Mom always had to be the direction-giver while traveling. My Dad was always a great driver, but for the decade leading up to his diagnosis he was slowly declining in this area. Dad never liked to read. He slept a lot in his easy chair. He was never a social person. For years, after never caring about what came in the mail, he began waiting on the mailman and had to be the first person to get to the mailbox. He'd go through everything before my mom could even look at it. If they didn't get any mail he thought the mailman lost it or kept it for himself. He was the same way about telephone calls. (Paranoid about both, I guess.) Now he's back to the point where he couldn't care less about either the mail or telephone calls; yet at the same time he worries that the phone doesn't work and makes me check for a dial tone every day when I visit. I've read that its possible to look back over the years and notice things like this, without ever really noticing them when they're actually happening, and now seeing that the AD patient began having symptoms long before they were really noticeable. I hope I'm making sense. Has anyone else here looked back and can now see how their loved one's AD has progressed?
But ...
After the sudden onset I found unpaid bills in the oddest places. I recall being annoyed with him for "not paying attention" and then forgetting what we were talking about. There were no obvious signs and none that showed up in an exam. But clearly the onset of the disease was not as "sudden" as it appeared.
And the "meltdown" was probably not so much a sudden acceleration of the dementia, but rather an inflammation in the brain, as it tried to fight off the foreign protein matter (Lewy Bodies).
Whew! Simple question, but very complex answer, I'm afraid.
balexander9, my husband was in a study also. I'm not awaiting the results of the autopsy.
I've recently began writing down all of the early signs of AD that we might have missed because we weren't looking for the disease, along with all the symptoms he exhibits today. Its amazing what I've put down in my notebook. Just a few:
-- For years Dad would "adopt" stories that other people told about incidents that happened to them. He even adopted some incidents from my life! For instance, years ago, when I was in my teens, we lived on some acreage and had chickens. One afternoon I went to the coop to pick up eggs from the egg boxes; lying the length of the egg boxes was a snake...probably a bull snake or rat snake. Several years before Dad was diagnosed with AD, he began telling this story as though it happened to him!
-- Some time before Dad was diagnosed with AD, my Mom discovered that he'd been hoarding things that she didn't even know he had, or that she didn't know he still owned. He hoarded all of his empty prescription bottles. She found various items hoarded in boxes in the back of his closet, behind his clothes.
-- Mom discovered that though Dad was taking a shower every day, he wasn't cleaning himself. In places it looked like he almost had fungus growing on his skin. This was before his diagnosis.
-- He often thinks he has eaten his napkin, or tries to eat his napkin.
-- He is obsessed with "when the time is going to change" (Spring forward, Fall back), like whatever time it happens to be is not the correct time. Strangely enough his mother, who also suffered from AD before she died, was obsessed with this same thing for years.
-- A few weeks ago he asked me when I thought his hair would turn grey. Its been grey for 40 years. I asked him whether he ever looks in the mirror to see what he looks like. He wouldn't answer.
-- He complains that my Mom stays up until 1:00 in the morning watching TV, and that's why she's tired all the time. She tired from taking care of HIM! She goes to bed right after the weather at 10:15 PM. Dad would like her to go to bed at 8 PM or earlier.
-- He worries about a house he hasn't owned for 15 years. Today he wanted to make sure I'd indicated on his IRS tax forms the profit he and my Mom made when selling their house last year. I don't know where that comes from. He won't accept that he didn't sell a house last year, that he doesn't own a duplicate house, and that he doesn't have to worry about a house he used to own years ago.
I would suggest that anyone who has a parent, etc. suffering from AD or another dementia keep a notebook and write down symptoms, etc. You'll be surprised at what you discover...
My heart was in my throat. So, it was time to MAKE her go to a doctor.
Looking back, I believe there were symptoms a least 5 years before. I mostly ignored them because they were few and very far between.
The biggest clue was in 2006 when she accused the carpet cleaners of stealing her jewelry. Then after her last husband passed in September 2008, she got involved in an affair with Obama, and he was staying in the (un) basement. In California, we don't have basements. His daughters were very nice to her, but what to do abot Michelle? HMMMMM?
As for my mom....I did notice things like she would read out loud every sign we passed by while riding in the car. When she would right things....she would mispell the word, cross it out, rewrite it. She would babysit my nephew and have to pick him up from preschool. Once she rode right by her turn, and my 3 year old nephew told gramma she went the wrong way. When we would go somewhere, she "knew everyone". She would go up to people and say "I know you!" She would hug total strangers. She would go up to a table of diners and do the same thing. Would try and start up a conversation like the folks were her dear old friends. She would wear 2 or 3 rings on her finger, then wrap rubber bands around them. She would wrap it so tight her finger would turn blue! Eventually, dad asked me to take all the jewelry out of the house. She started using the moistened bath wipes and would put them back in the box and would use thenm over again. When I discovered she was doing this....I threw the box out. Half hour later they were sitting back in her bathroom. She went and dug threw the garbage and found them. When she went on a trip with my dad and aunt and uncle...she locked herself ina stall in the ladies room and could not remember how to unlock the door. I could go on and on...it is really sad. I also believe now that my mom has sleep apnea..because ever since I was young I remember hearing mom making this weird noise when she slept. Looking back, I think that is what it was. She also snored. So, I think if you have this for so many years and it goes undiagnosed....things happen. There is no oxygen getting to the brain. Or very little. Over time I think it destroys the brain....and there ya go...you now have ALZHEIMERS! That is my theory.
YES, YES, and many more yes's!! Now that I look back, I can honestly say that it was a very, very slow process. It took years before Mom was finally diagnosed properly with AD. Since its been years I cannot remember everything that I noticed coming on. At first I just thought that Mom was acting up, getting mad and staying mad and moody on purpose and for nothing, so I just ignored her when she acted like that. Gosh, do I regret that now. She was like that a real long time. Then really, really slowly, I noticed different symptoms coming up but I still didn't connect the dots. I was in my own world and just didn't see it coming. Only until years later did I tell sis and bro that I think that something is "wrong" with Mom, but still couldn't connect the dots and to this day I feel guilty and very bad about it. They were in more denial than I was. They didn't even believe me. Because every time they would come over they would say, "nothing is wrong with Mom, she's acting normal, she remembers things really well." So sure, they would see her for less than one hour or for only a couple of hours, so of course they didn't believe me cause they didn't spend any length of time with her as I did. I emailed and emailed them constantly about it but I would be ignored. So I finally told them, yeah, you see her what, once a week? 2-3x a month? I see her every day and I know something is wrong so could the two of you get off your butts and believe me and we got to do something about this? I know there is no such thing as a perfect CG even though we try, but the guilty and regretful feelings remain.
Your question is a very wise one to ask because I believe that most people cannot see it coming because its such a slow and progressive disease. Then Mom had to have a colonoscopy, and that sent it from a scale of 2 to 100. It just exploded overnight. Then the surgery made it go over the edge. The stress of all she had to go through made the disease overwhelm me, it went up like the speed of light. It's very hard, because, after all, who has the experience with being around people with oncoming or ongoing AD if you've never seen it before in anyone, especially family?
And so, it just advanced to the point that I had to hire CG's to help me out cause Mom could not be at home alone and never left alone any more. I was caring for an adult baby. She still knew who I was and loved me so much, but I was terribly hurt cause I was losing the loving lady that I once knew.
Mom is gone now and the pain is still there. It's always there, every day, just the degree changes. Hope this helps. God bless you.
when we did retire, I mentioned this to our primary care doctor on base and was told it is probably just a little depression because he has retired.
so to answer your question, yes I noticed there was something wrong. I only wish the doctors we had visited for help had noticed and it hadn't taken 10 years to be diagnosed.