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The medical issues my mom has/taking medicine for: osteoarthritis, depression, type 2 diabetes, neuropathy, and also takes medication to treat Parkinson's symptoms (hasn't been diagnosed) as well as having past schizophrenic episodes.


I've been taking care of my mom for years now. 3 months ago all this required was being a son at home, spending a couple of hours a day talking with her, making her food and watching her eat and administering her medications. She could stand up, go to the washroom, go to the kitchen or walk to my room to ask me something while I am working from home. But start of July came around and my mom went from being able to move around the apartment on her own, showering, dressing and eating food unassisted to being unable to get to a sitting position after sleeping in bed, scooting her body to the edge of a seat, standing up on her own, walking or doing anything other than breathing and sleeping on her own. I was so confused because it showed itself so fast and progressively came worse, so I will start there and work my way to present.


It started in July when in one single day, she fell 3 times trying to stand up from her chair. The chair we bought her is a lift chair with a remote right next to her to help her stand up anytime she wants but she never uses it. They weren't bad falls but falls nonetheless. A couple of days later and it gets to her not even being able to stand up to be able to fall. She told me it was her right knee and it made sense because it was the right leg that would never move properly and eventually give out whenever I tried to help her walk (she would be walking or standing for more than 60 seconds and her right knee begin to bend and cause a domino effect to her whole body curling up, looking like she is trying to sit down on a chair that is not there until a backwards fall happens). Right knee replacement surgery occurred on August 4.


It was a total right knee replacement and she already had her left knee replaced about 8 years ago. The difference between the 2 experiences are night and day. While the first one had her in some pretty bad pain and gave her difficulty moving, it only took a few weeks before she could move around with a walker and be independent. With this right knee, for a month at the rehab center where she stayed, it took 2 therapists to bring her from being in bed into a sitting position and then lifting her up to stand. Even when she stands and holds the 2 wheeled walker, there would need to be 2 people to keep her body upright while pushing the walker. Going to the washroom required a gait lift even though the commode was about 10 feet away. Sadly, it’s not a long term care place and only a month was allocated for post operation therapy but she made almost no progress in ability to move her own body. She is now at home and we have her in a home car bed we rented. It is placed in the living room. There is a urinary catheter to make peeing easy and I help her move to the commode close by whenever she needs it (she also poos maybe twice a week at this point).


Long story short, I don't think it’s simply a knee problem. The falling before the surgery, the lack of balance and inability to control her own body and what I didn't even mention which was the constant stopping halfway through sentences, inability to drink from a cup (she closes her eyes while trying to drink or eat anything from her hand and a cup will touch her cheek instead of reaching her lips). I am supposed to book physiotherapy but I don't think she is in any condition to listen to commands for those kinds of exercises. I feel like this is dementia rapidly progressed from one of those previous falls? What should I do? I am planning on taking her to the family doctor after the weekend, hopefully him seeing and talking with her for 20 minutes will at least prove I am not crazy and that there is something undiagnosed going on.

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I wanted to come back here and follow up. Been a hectic week that resulted in taking my mom to the hospital on Wednesday after finder her unresponsive but conscious in the morning. I went to wake her up at the usual time at 9 AM to check blood sugar, give morning meds and feed her but she wouldn't wake up no matter how hard I tried. Normally I would think she is just in deep sleep because of the sleep/antipsychotic medications she takes at night but the day before she was already sleeping for 70% of the day. By the time I was still trying to wake up her, she had been sleeping for even longer (11 hours from time of night). Vitals were all fine when paramedics came and she was conscious, but still took her to the hospital for a doctor to evaluate. After about 3 hours from going to the hospital, she woke up and didn't remember anything from the morning or why she was at the hospital. They did their usual tests for blood, breathing, then did a CT scan and X ray of the chest, head, abdomen and leg where she had the knee replacement surgery. The only thing they found from the test was the start of a bladder infection from the catheter she has had for 3 weeks. The unresponsive sleep was likely a result of fighting that infection and the sleep/antipsychotic medication she had the night before.

I stayed with her in the emergency the entire day and slept over at the hospital and it wasn't until 3 AM in the morning that the specialist came by to check her out and look over her charts and medications. I brought up everything I have noticed from her pre knee surgery and after and his initial assessment is that her symptoms are related to the schizophrenia history and the Invega prescription she takes. They checked her head and heart and there was no signs of a stroke or dementia but the specialist wants her to see a psychiatrist while she is admitted to the hospital, while also reassessing all the medications she takes. I requested to also get her to see a neurologist for a second opinion and he assured that we can do that at some point while she is admitted but first is to watch how the antibiotics for the bladder infection work for her physical effects, then get her to see a psychiatrist and evaluate her mind and medications. My mom has only been at the hospital for a 24 hours but her physical condition is already better than when she was at home. For some reason, she is so much more responsive and agreeable with the nurses and the doctors. It would take me, my brother and my dad negotiating with her for 20-30 minutes just to get her to sit up and try to stand for exercises and at-home physical therapy, but with the nurses she does not argue, she gets up from the bed and her upper body control is so much better.

For some of the questions here I did not get to, I am not from the US or Europe. I live in Canada and I know this forum is US specific, but the resources and the community here aren't really there for other sites where I can get people from Canada. So sorry if anything I mentioned was confusing or clearly un-American or something.
My hope is that she does not get discharged to go home without a clear identification of the problem(s), a plan of attack and some restoration to her personal independency. Taking a break tonight from being at the hospital for so long and I have my cousin and my uncle with her tonight. Thank you all for the kind words and good points
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SnoopyLove Sep 7, 2023
Thanks for the update, Klaas. I hope your mother can get the care she needs and that you can get more clarity about her condition.
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two quick thoughts from experience, re bladder infection and hospital stays in elderly which could be causing at least some of your mom's problems:
1) bladder infections can send one into la la land, mental disorientation, confusion, etc. Especially w/a person on psych meds, hard to tell how much the infection could be affecting her. Many people don't know but as we age, we can lose the severe pain associated with UTI's. I was only 70 when it happened to me. So you don't realize the infection is there. Hospital said she had start of one; what if it had been ongoing at low level for some time?
2). Being immobalized in hospital a few days, like for knee surgery and rehab can destroy an older person's mobility. My sis was 82, hospitalized 4 days, by the eve of her discharge, she was dead weight. It's as if her leg muscles disappeared. She went into a home. Ins stopped paying for PT. Her husband got a person coming in to work with her. She went home, walking with a walker after 8 months, just from 4 days in hospital. Had he not found that person (trainer from a gym that only took people over 50) she would stayed the rest of her life bedridden.
If other said what I've said, I missed it, sorry.
Good luck to you and your family.
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You are really busy taking such good care of your mother! Please know that when people ask or speculate on where you live, it's nothing you are saying wrong or anything, they are just trying to make sure that the resources they suggest are appropriate to your situation.

I'm certainly no expert but I recall when talking to the surgeon for my husband's knee replacement that diligently following the prescription for physical therapy is very important to recovery. He told us that too often, patients want to "rest" and take it easy after surgery and that often results in the surgery doing very little good - they are in just as much pain when moving after as they were before. Yes it does HURT to do those exercises at first.

I hope they can get her on a better path while she's in the hospital.
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Tashi5 Sep 8, 2023
Thank you for reminding us that those exercises after surgery can HURT
and to do them anyway. I am due for a hip replacement (at 84) - now I know that I will not be harming myself further by painful exercising but in fact HELPING
myself by so doing. IMPORTANT INFORMATION for which I am grateful.
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I just had total knee replacement on Aug 8th. I was required to have a pre-op exam and blood work. Did she have this as well? If so, nothing showed up? Was someone with her in the exam room to help her answer questions? I was playing tennis 3x a week, am healthy and athletic, and this surgery is a challanging recovery for me, so I can't even imagine what it's like for your Mom.

If your Mom isn't making progress in PT, it will most likely stop being ordered for her. If she doesn't regain at least some mobility, this will be a very profound change in her daily care needs.

Do you have the option to take her to a neurologist (based on the weird spatial symptoms she was displaying pre-op)? Is it possible she had a TIA or stroke?

Also, is she administering her meds to herself, or are you doing that? I'm only asking to make sure she isn't over-medicating herself, which would account for some of the symptoms. Especially the post-op opioids.

Is she on any meds for her schizophrenia? Is it possible these meds are interacting with anything else she's taking?

IMO yes, there was something going on before her surgery. I hope you can get to the bottom of it soon!
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KlaasHuntelaar Sep 2, 2023
She did do a pre-op assessment a week before the surgery. It was about 5 hours and a long set of blood work tests, ecg, x ray and breakdown of how the surgery will go. She was fit for surgery so there wasn't anything in those tests that alarmed the medical team. Me and my dad were with her and she was present but we were basically the intermediary between her and the doctors for difficult questions that she couldn't fully understand.

I still give her all her medications because a couple of years ago I noticed she would both forget to take some medication (mostly the morning ones) and also overtake the opioids she got prescribed for the daily pain. I have been handling her medication for the last 2 years, but I show her everything I give her, remind her why she is taking them just so she can still be aware and have some involvement in that aspect. The schizophrenia medicine she takes is Invega and she takes Benztropine at night at the same time to both treat the side effects of Invega and treat the the tremor symptoms she has. I think these medications still work well because its been 3 years since her last schizophrenic episode.

Seeing a neurologist is definitely something I was thinking about. When she first got admitted to the rehab center after the surgery, I was speaking with the medical team during the introductions and their assessment of her for the care plan. They came in one after another and from the doctor to the physiotherapist and the occupational therapist, they all asked if she ever had a stroke. She was never diagnosed with one during any of the numerous hospital trips in the last year but it does look like she has stroke like symptoms. They are present one day and then the next day they are not really there.

I guess the first thing is to reach out to the Family doctor because there needs to be a diagnosis and a re-haul of here current care plan and medication. My dad thinks it may partially heal with rest but she was very rested and cared for super well at the rehab center, so if it was that simple it would have happened by now. So I also need to get my dad on board. What we had working for the past few years doesn't seem to be working anymore.

I also want to say thank you for your kind words here, you all are really nice.
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Just wanted to show my support for what you are going through. As a son who took care of his mother for a number of years, I know what it is like to see a loved one decline. My mom was always active throughout her life: well-known businesswoman, involved in community affairs, and committed to her family.

After hip surgery in her late 80's, the decline began. That is when I became her full-time caregiver. I made it a point to be very active in her care, communicating with medical staff frequently and asking questions non-stop. Each day was a new adventure, and I learned the importance of empathy, compassion, listening, and patience. I was proud she was able to remain in the family home, and that I was with her as she completed the journey to the sunset of her life at age 93.

You are clearly engaged in your mother's care, and that is to be commended. Keep being her advocate. She needs you. You will never regret the role you are playing for the lady who means so much to you.
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Edward1234 Sep 9, 2023
Beautifully said.

Always look forward to your posts.
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Wow, you're a hero! Yes, get the doctor should do a very thorough physical. You'll probably need specialists after that. If you don’t want to be doing this anymore, of course get her into a nursing home. I just don’t understand why people are so so afraid of nursing homes. I would never do this to my child. She may even be relieved to be able to get all the care she needs without bugging you.
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Hi Klaus

The first thought I had was did she even need the knee surgery? I guess most people of a certain age would have age related wear and the fact one has been replaced already might make it seem feasible.

If she has dementia she may not be able to identify that she can’t feel her right foot from the neuropathy?? The lift chair was difficult for my DH aunt to operate but she was about 95 when she was trying to use it. Your mom is so young. I’m so sorry this is happening to her and no, you are not crazy.

Neuropathy can be debilitating and very painful but your mom might not be able to identify or articulate the pain due to her dementia. Has she seen a neurologist at all? How long has she been on the Parkinson’s meds?

She could be even more addled by the anesthesia. That can take awhile to recover from and the catheter can cause UTI’s. Doubtful that’s causing all these symptoms you mentioned but be sure to have the doctor check for a UTI while you have her there.

Have you discussed her meds with a pharmacist?

Your mom has a lot going on. Diabetes, neuropathy, dementia, Parkinson’s meds, recent surgery.
My parents lived in a rural community where the medical care was sketchy. I found the best care for them was driving them to a medical center ER three hours away. There they got the best care as they had specialists for the various issues and these specialist were more experienced than the small hospital near my parents home.
These days a lot is dictated by insurance so your mom may have to go through her primary to be referred to a specialist. My parents had original Medicare and I could take them to any doctor. I realize there are many considerations. My parents wanted to go where they could get the best care, so that was what we did when things couldn’t be handled by a doctors visit. (I’m not advocating here that people go to ER’s for their regular medical care).

This is a lot to manage. Your mom is lucky to have you. I hope you are able to get some answers for her soon.
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Geaton777 Sep 2, 2023
In my recent total knee replacement I was not given anesthesia. I had an epidural and an IV of sleeping meds. I was not catheterized since it is not a long surgery.
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I agree with you absolutely that something undiagnosed is going on and she needs a thorough assessment and I think hospitalization is the way to go on this, so I would be doing EMS transport to the hospital and tell them she has gone from almost self caring at home to 24/7 total care. The records at the rehab will show that she never came out of her surgery enough to work with/cooperate with/follow instructions for rehab OR she is UNABLE to. She needs to start with xray of this surgery but I fear that she was failing before she ever got to the surgery and that the anesthesia from the surgery may have finished the job.

As I said, she needs a head to toe mental and physical now and best way to get her is get her there, admitted, and they need to be told in ER that she needs placement is there is no assessment and no cure for this condition. That is quickest way to get social services in on this to help, and you need a case manager on her case to be certain she now gets the physical and mental assessments she needs.

I am so sorry. This is very sudden, and seems to be worsening by the second. I hope you will let us know what is going on with updates.
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I think she needs to see a neurologist asap. Stroke? Mini strokes? Vascular dementia? Parkinson’s? These are some of the conditions that need to be ruled out. Good luck
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I presume you work in the medical field as your medical terminology & literacy appears top level.

I would suspect neuro from your initial post. Or maybe the medication mix?

I see your update where many things have been ruled out & a med review planned. Your health service seems very thorough. Good.

I met someone years ago dx with both later onset schizophrenia (Sz) & PD. I had wondered at the time how the Psychiatrist differentiated between psychosis (Sz or other) & hallucinations (PD). I also wondered which came first: the Sz, then PD (is there a higher risk of medication induced PD from the Sz meds?) Or was PD first & the schizophrenic-like symptoms actually Lewy Body Dementia (LBD)? (PD is a known risk factor for LBD). It effects dopamine, which plays an important role in behavior, cognition, movement, motivation, sleep, and mood.

A work college had something very neurologically wrong with her MIL. LBD was one suspect. Tests, scans, bloods could not diagnose yet family knew she was not right. That lady passed away much quicker than a diagnosis could be found. This was initially upsetting but the family made peace that nothing could have been done & she was not in pain.

I really hope your Mom's medical team can find some answers for you & you have a good outcome.
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