I had no idea what an UTI infection can do to the elderly. They can see things that aren't there, make them think crazy thoughts and even change the personality. My mom was doing all kinds of crazy things, getting dressed all by herself in the middle of the night, walking around the house at night and wanting to eat at 3:00 am. I finally noticed that her urine smelled terrible and took her to the doctor asking them to check for UTI. They did and sure enough had to put her on antibiotics. Now her actions are back to normal and I can finally get to sleep at night. PLEASE, if your parent is acting strange, more strange than usual, take them in to check for UTI. UTIs in the elderly are often mistaken as the early stages of dementia or Alzheimer's, according to NIH, because symptoms include:
Confusion, or delirium-like state
Agitation
Hallucinations
Other behavioral changes
Poor motor skills or dizziness
Falling
Sometimes, these are the only symptoms of a UTI that show up in the elderly—no pain, no fever, no other typical symptoms of a UTI.
The dr suggested to put my mom take remoras for anti depressant and appetite stimulant. Well she is on celexa. This remoras was given to her before and all it did for her is sleeeeep. I asked her to please wait on the the med. till I will speak to the dietician. Back in April te dr gave her that medicine and it was switched to just a " appetite enhancer. "that acts only for a appetite enhancer by itself . So
she did and that's my assignment for tomorrow.
Take care
Thx to all who listened.
Equinoc
Equinox
Equinox
In April of this year (2012), my 96 y/o mother had mild dementia and needed some assistance (relatively little) in her own home. She did not even use a cane, negotiated stairs daily (bi-level home) and still worked in her flower gardens & yard extensively. At the end of April she had a UTI that resulted in hallucinations and a 5 day hospital stay (she had been acting odd, but refused to go to a doctor prior to the hallucination stage when I dragged her to the ER). End of May was another bout of UTI that turned out to be a pseudomonas bacteria that took the hospital 6 days to diagnose. Her behavior became completely bizarre after 5 days in the hospital (hallucinations, delirium, hostility, paranoia -got to the point where she could not toilet or feed herself) and she was put into their Behavioral Unit where they treated her with anti-psychotics before she was finally started on an antibiotic. It was a nightmare and the psych Dr in the BU continued to administer anti-psychotics (whose side effects were, guess what? -hallucinations, delirium, aggression, etc) without advising us. I finally got bright enough to ask what was going on and raised a ruckus about it. That hospital event lasted 16 days, until almost mid-June. In mid-July she had another UTI and another 5 day hospital stay and was sent to a Nursing Home for rehab afterwards. The last week in July she was back in the hospital for another 5 day stay and then back to the Nursing Home to continue 'rehab.' She completed her 100 days rehab just last week and frankly has gone down-hill. Her mental and physical capabilities have deteriorated to the point where she can barely walk (says her 'feet stick to the floor'), mostly uses a wheelchair, and her dementia has progressed extensively -crys at everything, can't keep her in bed, has severe anxiety/agitation, trembling, depression, is obsessed with her BM's, won't use the call button for help and falls. You name it -horrible text-book dementia (no strokes). She's not my mom anymore, bless her baby-sweet heart.
Right now (FINALLY), she is on a low-dose antibiotic to hopefully lessen the chance for further UTI's, but the damage has already been done and it's now pretty apparent she is not going to recover mentally and will continue to regress. We're trying the Alzheimer's/Dementia Unit in an assisted living facility here, but are not sure if they will allow her to stay (5 falls in 5 days right now because she will not use the call button and just wants to cry to attract attention -a trick she learned at the NH). The staff at the ALF is much faster to respond than the NH because they have more staff, it's much quieter and nicer (and no stinky odor) and also more than $20,000 a year cheaper than the NH so we are keeping our fingers crossed that mom will be capable of acclimating to it. Her eval says she's still good enough for ALF, but it feels like she's working to prove the opposite. (sigh......)
If your loved one is having any of the symptoms, listed by Ireese above, get them to a doctor pronto. (b-t-w, dehydration & any infection can cause the same symptoms too). And further, the dip-stick test they perform in the office WILL NOT always identify a UTI. Some bacteria require a culture (and even then you have to hope the lab will identify it properly -it took 6 days on mom's pseudomonas and her Dr finally went down to the lab and identified it himself!!). Also, the bacteria must be identified to determine the specific antibiotic it is sensitive to -not all antibiotics will work on all the bacteria that cause UTI's. Hygiene is always a problem for the elderly -most don't wipe properly and sometimes they can't reach or use their hands sufficiently- so re-infection is always a possibility. I've read on the internet that a low dose of antibiotic over a long term provides the best protection and causes no problems. Mom's Dr has finally started her on it, but his method previously has been to treat each infection singly. In hindsight I feel that was a mistake and mom may have benefited earlier from the low dose. Discuss it thoroughly with your doctor.
Good luck to all!
Thank you
Equinox
MLC, Reno. NV
Sad, huh?