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His verbal abuse of my sister frightens us all. After a rage, he will sometimes admit he knows he has "a problem"/ his sister had Alzheimers + died 2 yrs ago/ his short term memory causes him to repeat himself/ both my sister + he are highly educated, retired professionals; consequently, he becomes belligerent if anyone even hints he might be doing anything wrong/my sister does not know what to do, except live with it/her family fears the abuse may turn physical, as he has shoved her in the past/he often threatens divorce/he will not see a dr. regarding any tests for Alzheimers, etc.

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Don't give up on this site. No one can diagnose Alzheimer's-or the lack thereof like pamstegma or, for that matter, a psychological pathology. You are so right, he shows signs of dementia and needs to see a doctor. A good start would be for your sister to see a doctor; if they have the same doctor, all the better, she can alert the doctor about his symptoms and get advice about how to cope. Perhaps she can suggest that they both schedule annual physicals as routine medical care. She can then give a list of symptoms and concerns confidentially to the doctor if they have different doctors. If this fails, I suggest that she should see a psychiatrist, psychologist, or counselor to help her cope and to make suggestions about his care. Good luck, sister622. Persist in your sister's behalf and ignore vitriol disguised as advice!
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How not helpful. My question was how do we get this man to see a dr., and the answer is that he's a mean grouch possibly married to a masochistic b - - - -? Last time I visit this site. Bye now.
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The most educated people can act with stupidity when it comes to emotions. Either move your sister in with you, call the police about the violence, and/or keep ignoring the problem until they are perhaps dead. The last suggestion is not a choice...
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My father, also a brilliant man, went through these same episodes in the beginning of his dementia. We had to do an "intervention" where we removed my mother for two days and all of us (his children) together confronted him. It was horrible. We finally got him on medication and the anger episodes lessoned. It has been 6 years now. My parents are living together in assisted living and he is still quite a handful but no longer violent. You have a long hard road ahead. Others, who responded here, may not have any compassion for what you are going thru but you are not alone.
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Maybe he just needs to have a medical workup to determine if he has anything physical going on such as low functioning thyroid or depression. You can't drag him there, but you can encourage him to go, don't mention dementia Instead focus on medical reasons -that may be easier for him to accept. If his wife feels in danger, then she needs to leave the home until he calms down.
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When my husband refused to see a doctor with his memory problems. After a period of over a year. I finally had enough and I sat down with him and finally said if you don't see a doctor, I'm leaving! He sat there for awhile and asked where would I go? I just said I would find a place to go. He made a doctor appointment the same hour. I didn't really want to do it this way, but I was exhausted and worried.
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I doubt if he has Alzheimer's, but it may be entirely possible he is just plain nasty. It's also possible she is pushing more than a few of his buttons by pointing out his mistakes. I knew a woman who thought she won every time she aggravated her husband into choking her. Mull it over.
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We discovered a MD who makes house calls
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Does he drink alcohol. That often causes rages when an alcoholic goes over the line.
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My father refuses treatment as well and will only go to the doctor if the appointment is made and we are on the way. Since he knows he forgets things, we treat it like everyone was aware all along. I make the appointment and either my Mom or I go in with him (depending on the nature of the visit). Again he knows he has a problem but figures he is handling it okay. I went through a fortunately short period of agression but knew it came from losing his drivers license. I expect further developments as time goes on, since he takes no medication for it. How to handle it. If your father is developing alzheimers and he is very intelligent he realizes that by acknowledging the disease he has to admit he is getting older and he cant do the things he could before. This is possibly very frustrating and confusing for him and people react to these feelings in many different ways. (We are all invincible afterall arent we, I'll never get old right? That happens to other people) I have no specific solution but I found that by studying how the disease affects him, I can better understand him (his reactions) and know some things that I can do to keep myself sane and everyone else reasonably happy. Best of luck.
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