u/Professional-Jump938

▲ 64 r/dementiaresearch+1 crossposts

Hi everyone. I’m looking for insight/support because the past few months — especially the last few days — have been overwhelming.

My mom is 73 and has dementia that we believe is probably in the mid-to-late stages. Over the last ~6 months she has declined significantly. She has lost a large amount of weight, her appetite had already been steadily declining, she sleeps much more, has become progressively weaker, and overall just hasn’t seemed like herself anymore.

She is no longer walking and had already progressed to needing a Hoyer lift for transfers prior to this hospitalization.

Recently, my brother went to see her and noticed she looked visibly smaller and exhausted. She was holding food in her hand but not really eating it, and at one point didn’t recognize my brother’s voice immediately. That moment really scared us because it felt like a major cognitive shift.

A home aide found her confused and less responsive a couple days ago after she had apparently been down overnight. EMS found her blood pressure dangerously low, and she ended up admitted to the ICU with septic shock caused by a severe UTI (possibly gallbladder involvement too, still being evaluated).

Since admission she has developed kidney injury, abnormal liver labs, malnutrition/low protein levels, anemia, and low urine output. She’s being treated with IV antibiotics, fluids, warming measures, and close ICU monitoring.

What’s hard is that her cognition fluctuates. Sometimes she seems alert and oriented and other times she seems disconnected, delayed, confused, withdrawn, or mentally “not there.”

I know dementia patients can decline dramatically during infections/sepsis, but I’m struggling to understand:

- how much of this could be temporary delirium from sepsis,

- how much may be progression of dementia,

- whether this sounds like end-stage decline/failure to thrive,

- or if this combination is something others have experienced.

Has anyone had a parent with dementia go through severe sepsis/UTI and recover mentally at least somewhat back to baseline? Or did it become a turning point where things never fully recovered?

I’m trying to stay realistic while still advocating for her and hoping for the best. Any insight or experiences would really help. ❤️

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u/Professional-Jump938 — 7 days ago
▲ 8 r/StandardPoodles+2 crossposts

Ok so we brought home our new standard puppy at 11 weeks . she is now 15 weeks old . She has had loose stool off and on and then our older dog also developed loose stool . We took both to the vet , April 11th we found out she had hookworms and treatment was started for 5 days . After the 5 days both dogs had normal stool . April 18th stool rechecked and they were both cleared .

April 26th both dogs developed very loose stool again. Overnight explosions again , so we assumed the hookworms came back based off of everything I have read online it’s common to re treat . Told to give quad de wormer by online emergency vet. That was given April 27th . Since then both dogs have had loose stool still . Called The vet (same company )said they don’t think it’s worms due to how quickly symptoms came back . I’m dropping off stool sample today but anyone have experience with this ? Could it be the worms ? Is diarrhea normal this long after de wormer ? The online vet and the actual vet are giving me conflicting info ….(they are the same company ) .

They are both on a preventative, I’m probably over cleaning at this point . Vet is offering an antibiotic in the mean time I can pick up today . I feel terrible for them and I’m very tired , it’s constant bathroom trips at 1am , 3am. My 2 years old is a toy , 6 pounds. Both dogs are eating normal , regular energy , playful . Just wondering anyone has anything happen similar .

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u/Professional-Jump938 — 13 days ago