How Can Metabolic Encephalopathy, Mental Confusion And Memory Issues Be Addressed And Treated?
Her current medications:
Acetaminophen 325 mg/every six hours as needed (barely used)
Alendronate sodium tablet 70 mg/1 time per day
Aspirin tablet 81 mg/1 time per day
Altenolol tablet 25 mg/1 time per day
Azelasitine HCI 5% two times/day for allergy
Calcium carbonate--Vitamin D3 tablet 600-400 mg-unit, 1 time per day
Calmsoeptine Ointment, as needed
Colaca capsule 100 mg/two times per day (not always needed)
Enoxaparin sodium solution, inject 30 mg subcutaneously at bedtime
Lisinopril table 10 mg/2 times per day. This was doubled to 20 at the last hospital visit because her blood pressure was so high. Blood pressure has been good since.
Mirtrazpine 7.5 mg, nightly
Sennosides capsule 8.6 mg, as needed for bowel regimen
The cause of metabolic encephalopathy should be found.
Detailed Answer:
Hello,
I have read your question and understand your concerns.
You need to specify one thing: the diagnosis was rapidly progressing dementia or metabolic encephalopathy because these two are different conditions.
There is not so much to be done in case of rapidly progressing dementia except symptomatic treatment.
Metabolic encephalopathy may be related to lack of glucose, oxygen or metabolic cofactors (hypoglycemia, ischemia, hypoxia, hypercapnia, vitamin deficiencies), or peripheral organs dysfunction (hepatic encephalopathy, uremic encephalopathy).
In case of metabolic encephalopathy, there is actually an underlying cause that needs to be found and treated.
Only this way the patient may improve.
Discuss with your stepmother's Doctor about these issues and further examinations in order to evaluate correctly the cause of metabolic encephalopathy.
Hope you found the answer helpful.
Let me know if I can assist you further.
Greetings.
As far as I know, and I will double check, all the tests you suggested have been conducted and were normal. She had a small spike of calcium in her blood, but that was corrected with hydration.
I also forgot to add that she has osteoporosis and is a breast cancer survivor of many years and recently has been tested. Results were fine. She had a complete bone scan as well while she was in the hospital, which the oncologist had asked for, too.
I found her last oncologist visit report and it states that in Feb 2018: Incidental finding of 1.8 cm hypointense focus at T1 vertebral body on MRI performed for an unrelated reasons. She was also found to have an igG monoclonal protein spike in her serum and free lambda and free lambda light chains in her urine both felt to be an MGUS. Oncologist recommended a skeletal survey with the comment "the patient would like to put this off until she sees me in 4 months." She hasn't had that survey yet.
So, I need to talk again to the oncologist, the new neurologist that's seeing her in the nursing home, and once again speak to her personal PCP? His reaction after her first hospital visit was that this was NOT the woman he's known for 15 years and he'd seen her as recently as March 2018. He's the one who asked for the full neurological workup.
Thank you
As a family, we've noticed some strangeness since around Christmas and more so after Valentine's Day. I'm only discovering now how isolated she has kept herself, cancelling appointments, not answering her phone or leaving her house, bad hygiene, etc.
Dementia is more likely the condition.
Detailed Answer:
Welcome back and thanks for the additional information.
Since you noticed a strangeness, poor personal hygiene, isolation, etc., in your stepmother's behavior these last months, dementia remains the most likely condition that is causing these issues.
This is reinforced also by the tests that were carried out to assess a possible metabolic encephalopathy that resulted negative.
Discuss with her Neurologist about further management and treatment.
One more thing, I suggest brain imaging (MRI) too to be done to exclude any frontal lobe lesions that may mimic dementia symptoms.
Hope this helps.
Take care.
Okay.
Detailed Answer:
Hello again.
Okay then, MRI should have shown if there is encephalopathy or frontal lobe lesions, so, dementia is still the most likely diagnosis.
Regards.
You are welcome.
Detailed Answer:
Feel free to discuss with me about your health questions.
In good health.