Follow
Share

Most her day is spent trying. My mom is in first stages of acquired Parkinson's and complains she is constipated. She no longer can walk because of balance; therefore, I accompany her on every trip to the bathroom. She has a BM each afternoon, but still insists she needs to go at the start of each day . Sometimes, more than not, these visits last up to an hour or so by adding "just a few more minutes" each time I check on her.We have tried softeners, juices, even chair exercises. Each with positive results eventually. Like I said, she does go every afternoon. Are these physical signals she is receiving a symptom giving her a false alarm? It has almost taken over the focus for the day!

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
You should talk to her doctor about this; you should review her meds with her pharmacist and see if any of them have the effect of constipation.

Is she on an antidepressant? It sounds as though there is an element of anxiety/agitation here that might be addressed through meds.

Hoping someone else with some Parkinson's knowledge/experience will be along shortly with a better answer !
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

My mom with dementia occasionally had a problem with what appeared to be constipation that led to three or four ER visits. Her problem, I think, stems from having chronic diarrhea as long as I can remember. I believe, in her case was because after we started a probiotic to curb the diarrhea, she did not know to push and explaining to her was of no help. And from the consistency of the bm, after enemas to open her up, she most definitely was not constipated! Her problem was also due to her having some bowel removed in her 30's because of damage from the chronic D. Sometimes the ER tests and bowel sounds indicated that her intestine had a blockage. So, whatever causes it this is something that has to be monitored constantly with my mom.

Does your Mom also have dementia? There are some on this site that have to manually disimpact their loved ones. Is it the brain that does not send the signals? Is it they are just too weak? Who knows, anybody's guess. It would be so much easier if they were able to tell us. Unfortunately with dementia it will remain guesswork.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter