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Mom is in stage 5 ALZ and lives in assisted living with my dad, who also has ALZ --- stage 6. Her cognitive abilities vary from month to month, but recently have been pretty good. We've been making hard decisions on how much intervention and hospital trips to take for both my parents--- we are close to palliative care and mom and dad both are sick of the doctors/hospitals/medical intervention world they are in. I had the opportunity to sit down with mom about a month ago when she was doing very well and asked her point blank what she would want me to do if she needed to be admitted to the hospital for something serious. She very strongly told me she does NOT want to be admitted to the hospital, even if it means she could die.



Moving forward --- this weekend she had signs of a stroke (she fell twice and couldn't speak. She could only shake her head yes or no.) While at the ER, the doctor highly recommended that I admit her to another hospital an hour away because he felt she should be monitored and there was an MRI machine there and he wanted her to have an MRI over the weekend pretty quickly, instead of waiting until Monday (when a machine would be available at the hospital she was at.) I asked the doctor what her care would be if the MRI did show a stroke (this is apparently the only way to know for sure) and he mentioned surgery, depending on the type of stroke/situation, but really couldn't tell me any other treatment option for a stroke. After talking to him at length, I felt like there wasn't anything we really could do for her given her age and Alzheimers (surgery is out.) However, the assisted living facility seemed to want her to stay in the hospital because they felt they could monitor her better than back at assisted living. I got scared, so I went against mom's wishes (she was adamantly shaking her head "no" to going) and we admitted her to the hospital. It is now Sunday evening --- we are past the 24 hour critical time since the stroke symptoms began (early Saturday AM), mom is now back to her usual baseline, talking, walking, and all stroke signs appear to have disappeared. The MRI still has NOT happened and I have no idea when it will --- the hospital can not give me a timeline and tomorrow will be the second full day of waiting. Mom is now in tears, begging to go home, getting up from her bed and sending off all the nurses running. My dad is crying back at AL with anxiety, wanting her home, and my stomach is in knots, now realizing that I should have never admitted her.



I don't know what the hospital will do tomorrow, but they don't seem in any hurry for anything and I want to bring her home, even if it goes against the doctor's wishes.



Any thoughts on this? At what point did you stop taking your loved one to the hospital. How do you know when that is? Mom is not at the point where she would qualify for hospice, btw. But she just wants to be left along in peace and I don't blame her. I feel so guilty for putting her through this. Had I known the MRI would not have happened within the 24 hour timeframe the first ER doctor recommended it, I would never have admitted her.

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ForSuch,
You have made the right decision in my humble opinion and I am glad the medical community agrees and was supportive in plans for palliative care. This is what your Mom wants and is what is likely the best for her. All here are correct in that the thinning of the blood in elderly often causes a bleed. The strokes from cerebral hemorrhage are just as deadly as those clot related.
I hope you will continue to update us here.
Glad this is all checked, and Mom is home in your loving care. Trust you completely.
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Thank you for everyone’s kind words. Forsuchatime, I understand the feeling and worry about a full-blown stroke. Just take it one day at a time and be there as much as you can for your Mom. When my Mom came home from the hospital after her three TIA’s, she was bedridden. I used this time to care for her as much as I could, and just be there for her. It was the most difficult thing I’ve ever been through after she had a stroke overnight, and became unconscious for 3 days. I felt guilty for weeks that we didn’t take her back to the hospital. But she died at home in her own bed peacefully with my dad, holding her hand and her family all around her. Her cardiologist said they would’ve put her on life-support if we had taken her back to the hospital and it would’ve been very painful for her .Hospice was a big help during this time. I wish you and your family all the best during this difficult time.
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I am going to be blunt.
There is a very good chance mom will die of a stroke before the Alzheimer's kills her.
I urge you to contact Hospice now and see if both mom and dad would be Hospice eligible. (I am guessing they would be)
There will be no more hospitalizations. (although Hospice sometimes will hospitalize a patient)
No involved testing

You say mom is not at the point where she would qualify for Hospice. Have you had Hospice in to evaluate her and dad? While "6 months or fewer" is commonly stated a person can be on Hospice much longer. (My Husband was on Hospice almost 3 years)
There needs to be a "documented, continued decline". With the stroke that you are aware of she has probably had other small, undetected strokes. Her declines may happen literally overnight.

If mom and dad have a DNR or better yet a POLST (goes by other names in some states) make sure it is posted in a location where it would be seen by paramedics. Make sure you have a copy with you each time you take them out. If they go out with a group from the facility make sure she has a copy in her purse, he has a copy in the wallet or if a staff member goes out with the group make sure they have a copy.
If anyone calls 911 and that piece of paper is not available the paramedics will do what they have to do and when she arrives at the hospital the hospital staff will do what they have to do. This means CPR, Tubes, IV's.
CPR works great on TV, might work well on a younger, healthy person but for the rest of us CPR if done correctly will probably break ribs, crack the sternum and with the broken ribs a lung (or 2) may be punctured. This results in recovery from broken bones and the potential for pneumonia. (if the CPR worked)
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May I ask how old your mom is? My mom was 93 and had a TIA and I took her to the ER and the doctor did not want to give her the blood clot busting drug . . She also had a developing blood clot on her brain. .She only weighed about 80 pounds and was very frail. She had two more TIAs and then had a major ischemic stroke. This all happened within 10 days. We put her on hospice before she left the hospital and she passed away peacefully at home .I still wonder what would’ve happened if she had been given that blood clot busting drug.. maybe things would’ve turned out differently. I often feel guilty about this. It’s only been three months.
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Daughterof1930 Sep 25, 2023
My mother had multiple strokes and despite getting to the hospital very quickly and even being in the hospital during one of them, she was never once given the famed clot busting medication. Apparently, there is often not a clear cut indication of when it’s best to administer it, and many hospitals err on the side of not giving it. At least that was out experience. I hope you’ll gain comfort that your mother passed peacefully, that truly is a blessing
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Just an update: When I returned to the hospital this morning, I had determined ahead that Mom was coming home, MRI or no MRI. I sort of went in there with guns blazing. Lol. Thankfully, when I got there and advocated for Mom's release, they were in total agreement. She got an MRI in the middle of the night last night when I wasn't there, and the MRI showed nothing --- so the doctor believes it was a TIA. The doctor was VERY helpful and seemed knowledgeable about ALZ and palliative care. In the past, I have felt that the doctors have wanted to push for all medical interventions no matter what, so it was a great relief and surprise to have an understanding doctor.

Thank you to everyone who responded to my questions last night. You all helped to cement in my heart what I knew was the right path forward. I just needed to hear it!
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AlvaDeer Sep 26, 2023
So glad of this peace for you.
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Why did she not get an initial CT scan? That is where strokes are initially found. I worked with neuro patients. Since "time is brain" the vast majority of patients transfered to interventions care as an emergency. MRIs take way too long to schedule and complete. That would mean clot busters, OR or interventions procedures need to be done by a certain time frame for success. It may be time to consider hospice.
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sp196902 Sep 25, 2023
She has Alzheimer's stage 5 it seems thats a moot point.
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Ask for another hospice evaluation for mom and stop all these interventions she does not want. Let her live in peace now, as I did for my mother with advanced dementia.

Best of luck.
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I would not put her thru an MRI either. You really think she is going to be able to not move on her back for a period of time? I get claustrophobic just thinking about it. They may use restraints. At stage 5 and 6, I think I would start cutting down on doctor visits. If your not going to fix the problem then don't do the test. Strokes are common in people who suffer from Dementia. By calling in Hospice, there will be no more doctor or hospital visits.
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What's the point in doing the MRI if mom wants to be left alone and in peace? Having surgery would certainly disrupt your mother's peace of mind and at stage 5 I think she deserves to not have doctors poking and prodding at her and cutting her open.

It's hard to do nothing when someone you love has a health crisis, to just leave them alone and let a major illness like a stroke or cancer or a heart attack eventually take their lives without trying to do everything you can do to help them get better. But mom isn't going to get better. She is going to get worse as her alzheimer's progresses.

I hope you will be able to ignore the doctors and give her a chance to leave this world the way she wants to, and don't beat yourself up for admitting her to the hospital. You are only human and it is natural to want to do everything you can for someone you love.

It is so much harder to not do anything and watch the person you love die when there are resources and treatments that can extend their life but you know that the cost of life extension with alz is not what the person wants or what is good for that person, especially at stage 5.
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Forsuchatime,
Your mother may have had a TIA, since the symptoms resolved within 24 hours without a deficit. Ask the care team for her palliative consult now. That team will help you talk this through. At this point an MRI may show you the source of the TIA, but then you're back to having to decide if going against what seems to be your mother's wishes would be what she wants or worth it. Helping families navigate these decisions is a palliative care team's specialty, so use them. Best wishes.
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ElizabethAR37 Sep 25, 2023
Yes, absolutely agree. I'd vote with mom on this and hope OP will carry out her stated wishes. Time for palliative and/or hospice care consult for sure.
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Any stroke is emergent in that treatment with CLOT BUSTERS must occur at ONCE. That you had a doctor unaware of that is kind of beyond my ability to imagine.

Too late now on any of that, so here we are.

Since all symptoms of stroke seem now to be gone, it may be that your Mom is suffering TIA. You can look that up as "Transischemic attack". Symptoms can come and go if there is some plaque in the carotid arteries, or for other reasons. This can be treated with a minimally invasive surgery to remove plague or with thinning the blood a bit (with all the nastry side effects involved there).

Yes, your Mom seems adamant about not wanting any interventions now. Sounds your Dad is the same. Do they have this in an advance directive? Are you the MPOA. In hospital now call in the SOCIAL WORKERS at once and see about getting this done if palliative or hospice is to be the choice. There are decisions coming now. One to to treat and the other is palliative care. You seem clearly to already know that. So get a social worker to help you get done what moves you will make in the near future.
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Forsuchatime Sep 25, 2023
Yes, the ER doctor was aware about treating right away, but the drug used can be dangerous for frail elderly and by the time we got mom to the ER, we were past the window of opportunity.

Thanks for your feedback!
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How hard for you. Carrying the load for both parents.

Caught between balancing Mom's preferences for peace (no more hospitals) against our modern illness-focused health care (treat everything).

I think in your shoes, when these matters don't align I would refer to Quality of Life as the guide.

Now that Mom is back at baseline & can walk & talk, I'd strongly consider discharging to AL. I'd try to weigh up what benefit an MRI would give? (Eg TIA, now passed.. so..?).

My own grandmother had many suspected TIAs. Hopitalisation if fall with injuries so to treat the effects of the fall eg ensure no broken bones. Otherwise TIAs fell under 'natural events'.
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It never hurts to ask for hospice.. worst thing that can happen is they say no.. but they won’t.
mom graduated 3 times out of hospice. The third time she was sent to heaven.
You can ask … and your dad too.
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does your mom have a POLST FORM filled out?

if you are POA you can sign her out
against medical advice form.
have her go back to AL with your dad.
Do ask for Hospice Evaluation. Her palliative care doctor may be able to evaluate for hospice.
Do not feel guilty..but do make sure you have her DNR form and her actual wishes close by in case fire department paramedics are called, they know not to transport her.. it’s on the POLST form and DNR form..
I framed my aunt’s POLST -and put it in the wall. She didn’t know what it was, but everyone knew what to go or not to do. I also write my contact information for everyone to see. My LO’s were 5 minute drive from me.. 2 minutes if I ran a stop sign and sped a little.
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Forsuchatime Sep 25, 2023
Mon and dad both have a DNR form posted in their room, but what is a POLST form?
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First, she may very well qualify for hospice, so contact the hospice company most used at her AL and ask for an evaluation.

Second, this is the time to be done with hospitals. They freak out dementia patients far too much as you've seen, so make the decision to check her out tomorrow and take her home.

This is what I did with my mother. After a nightmarish two-weeks in the hospital during Co-id when she could have no visitors, I said we were done, arranged for hospice, and brought her back to her memory care place. I said we'd treat whatever ailed her there as best we could, and that was that.

She had phenomenal care those last seven months because she had the regular caregivers plus a hospice nurse keeping tabs on her. She came home from the hospital and promptly got Covid, was nursed through that in place, didn't eat except for supplemental milkshakes, had a nasty pressure sore treated in place, and in general was pretty perky and content in spite of it all.

Get the hospice evaluation, and go from there. I'll bet she qualifies.
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Forsuchatime Sep 25, 2023
Thank you for your advice. My heart is telling me it is time to say goodbye to admitting her. She doesn't mind the ER visits and they have been helpful in the past to check on brain bleeds/broken bones, etc. But the overnight hospital stays and endless waiting are agonizing to her. I highly doubt she is hospice eligible, as she can communicate very well with me and is still mobile
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