“Wallet Smarts” (caring.com)

This short article on caring.com is about changing a purse or wallet for someone with dementia to something that might be safe to carry.

I read about this article on California’s Link2Care email support group.

Robin

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www.caring.com/articles/wallets-preserve-older-adults-dignity

Wallet Smarts That Preserve an Older Adult’s Dignity and Security
By Paula Spencer Scott, Caring.com senior editor
Last updated: February 02, 2012

A loved one who lives with a family caregiver probably has little need to carry a wallet or pocketbook — but that doesn’t mean that many older adults don’t want to continue the habit.

A purse or wallet, after all, is something he or she probably carried since the teenage years. Giving it up now feels like yet another loss and symbol of worthlessness to many older adults. Lack of documentation and money can create needless anxiety.

Understandably, you may worry about safety and security. Here’s what helps:

Exchange a driver’s license for an official ID. A license is a powerful source of identity, security, and importance. Seeing an empty space in the wallet where a driver’s license used to rest is disconcerting. A solution: Take your loved one to get an identification card at a local DMV office. (In some states, you can do it online.) It’s not a license to drive, though it looks similar to one.

Provide a little cash. Large amounts of money can get lost, given away, or spent on unnecessary items. But it’s better for someone obsessed about having a wallet or purse to have the security of seeing a few bills in the billfold. Without visible cash, your loved one may experience a constant, low-grade anxiety that “all my money is gone,” or “I’m broke.” He or she may get on a jag of wanting you to go to the bank together to get some, to be reassured.

Get a credit card with a very low balance. You do want to remove your loved one’s credit cards if financial responsibility has become problematic. One option is to replace a card with one that has a low limit that you can monitor. Some caregivers replace effective cards with outdated ones that no longer work; when their loved one tries to use it, they find out that it’s denied and get upset in the moment, but then they often forget about it. Other people are content to see some cards in their wallets that look like credit cards — library card, membership cards, plastic hotel room keys. Lacking the wherewithal to actually use them, someone with dementia, especially, will feel reassured by simply seeing something there that looks right “just in case.” Experiment to see what works in your specific situation.

“The cost of dying: It’s hard to reject care even as costs soar” (SJMN)

San Jose Mercury News author Lisa Krieger has started a wonderful series of articles on “the cost of dying.”  In this initial poignant article, she shares the sad story of her father in the ER and then in the ICU.

Here’s a link to the article:

www.mercurynews.com/cost-of-dying

The cost of dying: It’s hard to reject care even as costs soar
By Lisa M. Krieger
San Jose Mercury News
Posted:   02/05/2012 08:14:05 AM PST

I encourage everyone to read it so that you can learn from Ms. Krieger’s story.  Many of the comments posted are worth reading as well.

At the end of the article, she writes:

“Modern medicine had carried Dad’s body beyond what it could bear. Even the best life is finite.”

In my humble opinion, these were the points in the story where things could have improved:

  • Ms. Krieger could’ve discussed the DNR (do not resuscitate) order with her father early on.  She could have learned if he wanted to have a DNI (do not intubate) order as well.
  • Did she not have her father’s advance care directive? His POLST would have indicated if he wanted to be intubated.
  • Why wasn’t her father placed on hospice right after his fall?
  • Why didn’t Ms. Krieger have the DPOA and DNR documents with her at the hospital?  Or the advance care directive or POLST?

Please have the “advance care” discussions NOW with all of your family members!

Robin

 

Mass Genl researchers look at anesthesia and cognitive dysfunction

This post may be of interest to those who have a loved one with dementia, or those contemplating surgery with general (inhaled) anesthesia.

A Boston Globe newspaper article I circulated back in 2007 was about hospital-induced delirium.  In that article, Massachusetts General Hospital researchers drew attention to the anesthetic isoflurane as part of the cause of delirium.

Last week Massachusetts General Hospital distributed a press release on isoflurane; it causes Alzheimer’s-like changes in mammalian brains.  Researchers mention an anesthetic that may be safer — desflurane.

The full press release is copied below.

Robin

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www.massgeneral.org/about/pressrelease.aspx?id=1443

Massachusetts General Hospital Press Release
Study reveals how anesthetic isoflurane induces Alzheimer’s-like changes in mammalian brains
MGH researchers find desflurane may be safer anesthetic option for patients with Alzheimer’s disease
01/Mar/2012

The association of the inhaled anesthetic isoflurane with Alzheimer’s-disease-like changes in mammalian brains may by caused by the drug’s effects on mitochondria, the structures in which most cellular energy is produced.  In a study that will appear in Annals of Neurology and has received early online release, Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) researchers report that administration of isoflurane impaired the performance of mice on a standard test of learning and memory – a result not seen when another anesthetic, desflurane, was administered.  They also found evidence that the two drugs have significantly different effects on mitochondrial function.

“These are the first results indicating that isoflurane, but not desflurane, may induce neuronal cell death and impair learning and memory by damaging mitochondria,” says Yiying (Laura) Zhang, MD, a research fellow in the MGH Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine and the study’s lead author. “This work needs to be confirmed in human studies, but it’s looking like desflurane may be a better anesthetic to use for patients susceptible to cognitive dysfunction, such as Alzheimer’s patients.”

Previous studies have suggested that undergoing surgery and general anesthesia may increase the risk of Alzheimer’s, and it is well known that a small but significant number of surgical patients experience a transient form of cognitive dysfunction in the postoperative period.  In 2008, members of the same MGH research team showed that isoflurane induced Alzheimer’s-like changes – increasing activation of enzymes involved with cell death and generation of the A-beta plaques characteristic of the disease – in the brains of mice.  The current study was designed to explore the underlying mechanism and behavioral consequences of isoflurane-induced brain cell death and to compare isoflurane’s effects with those of desflurane, another common anesthetic that has not been associated with neuronal damage.

In a series of experiments, the investigators found that the application of isoflurane to cultured cells and mouse neurons increased the permeability of mitochondrial membranes; interfered with the balance of ions on either side of the mitochondrial membrane; reduced levels of ATP, the enzyme produced by mitochondria that powers most cellular processes; and increased levels of the cell-death enzyme caspase.  The results also suggested that the first step toward isoflurane-induced cell death was increased generation of reactive oxygen species – unstable oxygen-containing molecules that can damage cellular components. The performance of mice on a standard behavioral test of learning and memory declined significantly two to seven days after administration of isoflurane, compared with the results of a control group.  None of the cellular or behavioral effects of isoflurane were seen when the administered agent was desflurane.

In another study by members of the same research team – appearing in the February issue of Anesthesia and Analgesia and published online in November – about a quarter of surgical patients receiving isoflurane showed some level of cognitive dysfunction a week after surgery, while patients receiving desflurane or spinal anesthesia had no decline in cognitive performance.  That study, conducted in collaboration with investigators from Beijing Friendship Hospital in China, enrolled only 45 patients – 15 in each treatment group – so its results need to be confirmed in significantly larger groups.

“Approximately 8.5 million Alzheimer’s disease patients worldwide will need anesthesia and surgical care every year,” notes Zhongcong Xie, MD, PhD, corresponding author of both studies and director of the Geriatric Anesthesia Research Unit in the MGH Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine.  “Developing guidelines for safer anesthesia care for these patients will require collaboration between specialists in anesthesia, neurology, geriatric medicine and other specialties.  As the first step, we need to identify anesthetics that are less likely to contribute to Alzheimer’s disease neuropathogenesis and cognitive dysfunction.”  Xie is an associate professor of Anesthesia at Harvard Medical School (HMS)

Additional co-authors of the Annals of Neurology study are Zhipeng Xu, MD, PhD, Hui Wang, MD, and Yuanlin Dong, MD, MGH Anesthesia; Rudolph Tanzi, PhD, MGH Neurology; Hai Ning Shi, DVM, PhD, MGH Pediatrics; Deborah Culley, MD, and Greg Crosby, MD, Brigham and Women’s Hospital;  and Edward Marcantonia, MD, MS, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.  The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the American Geriatrics Society, the Alzheimer’s Association and the Cure Alzheimer’s Fund.

Massachusetts General Hospital, founded in 1811, is the original and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The MGH conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the United States, with an annual research budget of more than $750 million and major research centers in AIDS, cardiovascular research, cancer, computational and integrative biology, cutaneous biology, human genetics, medical imaging, neurodegenerative disorders, regenerative medicine, reproductive biology, systems biology, transplantation biology and photomedicine.

“Little-known brain disease rips apart lives” (FTD)

This is a terrific article in today’s Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) about a family challenged by FTD (frontotemporal dementia), which used to be called Pick’s Disease.  In the local Brain Support Network group, we’ve had two people with a clinical diagnosis of PSP who were diagnosed with FTD (Pick’s Disease) upon brain autopsy.  Also, one person in our BSN support group was clinically diagnosed with DLB but ended up with a different type of frontotemporal dementia on brain autopsy.  So….it’s probably good for those dealing with dementia to know about FTD as it can look like the disorders in our group.

I do wish we could get some wonderful articles written about the disorders in our group in the SF Chronicle or SJ Mercury News!

Robin

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latimes.com/news/local/la-me-dementia-20120210,0,5574998.story

COLUMN ONE
Little-known brain disease rips apart lives of victim, loved ones

By Thomas Curwen
Los Angeles Times
February 10, 2012

When Stu Bryant began acting rude and impulsive, his family was baffled. Then they learned he had frontotemporal disease, which strips away self-restraint and the ability to decipher social situations. More than a year after the diagnosis, Maureen Bryant had grown accustomed to making excuses for her husband. When Stu stood behind a tattooed woman in line at Panda Express, and said loudly, “Wow, that’s a lot of tattoos,” Moe stepped between him and the woman and apologized.

When he repeatedly wandered into the house that was being built down the street — despite the “No Trespassing” sign and the fence — she explained to the owner that he was just curious. Possibly the most embarrassing episode occurred when they were coming home from dinner, and she dashed into a mini-mart at a marina in Oxnard to buy milk.

 
Here’s a link to the full article:
latimes.com/news/local/la-me-dementia-20120210,0,5574998.story

Social Worker’s Reading List for Dementia Caregiving

Marguerite Manteau-Rao, LCSW, is a local social worker with expertise in working with dementia caregivers.  As part of her private practice work with dementia caregivers, she recommends these books:

• Dr. Allen Power, Dementia Beyond Drugs
• Richard Taylor, Alzheimer’s From the Inside Out
• Olivia Ames Hoblitzelle, Ten Thousand Joys and Ten Thousand Sorrows
• Nancy Pearce, Inside Alzheimer’s
• Christine Bryden, Dancing With Dementia
• Jon Kabat-Zinn, Full Catastrophe Living
• Rick Hanson, Buddha’s Brain

I’ve read a few of these books as well.  Richard Taylor’s book is wonderful.  He was diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s.

Recently, Marguerite mentioned the book “Ten Thousand Joys and Ten Thousand Sorrows” in the context of being able to find joy in disruption.  It sounds like that book in particular would be of interest to all caregivers, not just caregivers to those with dementia.

Robin