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My mom is in late stage 6 Alzhimer's. I just learned her primary care physician prescribed it. It seems at this late stage its benefits are modest as she's had a lot of damage to her brain. So my thoughts are why is the doctor prolonging suffering? It's not as if she was less advanced and we'd preserving more mental functioning. Anyone have this situation? I feel like a monster for even thinking I don't want it being given.

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My husband was seen by neurologist. Asked a few qustions and duagnosed mild cognitive disorder. Had experienced mild stroke ( thought i recignized symptoms, to Er but not seen for 12 hrs ! ) Was having some difficulty talking in responding to questions. Office visit, maybe 15 min. Gave prescription, told to come back in 1 yr. Refused to answer question. Gave pamphlet to read. He was part if a large practice. All donnazipril did was cause hin to be extremely sleepy, drugged, as if too much cold medicine (antihistimine). Then noticed b4 1st dose in a.m. , he was his usual self. Others did also. Asked my spouse how he felt. Said he fekt deep "fog". Hard to concentrate, focus, trying to struugle to be alert. And I am thinking how is this making him better. Si, while still alert and not drugged from med dose. I asked if ge wanted ti feel lije this with the med and "hope" it would work or let the the pricess continue. He wanted to keep expsriencing life. Saw different neuri doc. Decreased dose, did extensize testing, advised what can be dine in activities to support his skills. Mived in did well. When stage began with obvious decline, re evaluated. No need for it and also having side effects. Enjoyed, embraced each day we had remaining, with his mind not blurred. As some have mentioned. No cure, just some help along the way. Looking back, satisfied we did what we did. Husband was able to partcipate and enjoy life, gradual fadding. It is a disease where you embrace each day and show and your persin how much you live them.
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Reply to Memories42
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My wife was given this by her neurologist proximately three years ago also Memantine. She’s in stage six in November. He said he wouldn’t be opposed if she stopped taking it didn’t see any benefit to it so we took her off of it. I noticed that she’s eating much better since she’s off of it, but still sleeps a lot, but not as much as before.
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Reply to Bob1344
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I think the studies on Aricept, and Memantine are all on early stage alzheimers as you can't perform studies on late stage alzheimers.

Mom was on Donepezil (Aricept) for years. I can't say it did much.

I think a lot of people get scared of discontinuing the meds.
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Reply to brandee
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I would avoid this drug. It causes a lot of side effects. Like falls. It offers very little if any at best benefit. Avoid it.
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Reply to KellyGirl71
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My mother was prescribed 5mg of Donepezil by a neurologist in Feb of 2025. No cognitive testing was done at that time?!? I began caring for her in April of 2025. She was having extreme, explosive, uncontrollable diarrhea. After numerous ER visits, an EGD, and colonoscopy, it was determined that Donepezil was causing her GI problems. Just sharing my experience, so you are aware of possible side effects. My brother, who had medical POA, encouraged the neurologist to put her on Donepezil. He no longer has medical and financial POA!
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Reply to Seawarrior
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Although there are no Black Box warnings noted for Donepezil (Aricept), there are 18 "common reactions", and 11 "serious reactions" listed in the Epocrates App. It is mainly used for Alzheimer's disease, as well as for mild to moderate dementia. My SIL's neurologist suggested its use about 4 years ago for her ALZ dementia. He went over the side effects, and left it up to us if we wanted her to take it. If there is no history of heart disease, seizures, COPD, asthma, or cardiac arrhythmias, it is most likely safe to take. Results are minimal, as there is no magic pill to cure ALZ. It would be prudent to have a frank discussion with your provider regarding the pros and cons of this medication. Subsequently, my SIL did start the medication, which temporarily slowed her dementia, however within two years, she needed to be put on a second medication, Memantine (Namenda). Taken together, they seem to be keeping her mental status stable so far. She has also tried the Exelon patch, but after about 7 months, she developed a body rash, and so it was discontinued. I feel that Exelon worked the best for her. There are some newer medications, of which I am not personally familiar with, however, nothing can reverse the course of this devastating disease. Hopefully, funding for the clinical trials will be allowed to continue.
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Reply to Mommers85
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Yes , this is me.
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Reply to Amaryllis123
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I believe it is indicated for mild to moderate Alz. If you look at the clinical trials it is barely more effective than placebo. There just aren't other options. Maybe the doctor feels that it can't hurt. I personally don't think it is prolonging anything.
We just took my mom off. She is still qwwŵqwin the mild/moderste stage but we are trying to figure out the source of her dizzyness and her geriatrician said it is a known cause. Howevet, fyi, the neurologist who originally prescribed it scoffed at that suggestion.
You didn't ask but I am volunteering that the one drug I do feel helped her was Lexapro. Just a tiny dose but I think it was enough to lighten her outlook and help her sustain a better mood.
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Reply to Jennyjenjen
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I believe it is indicated for mild to moderate Alz. If you look at the clinical trials it is barely more effective than placebo. There just aren't other options. Maybe the doctor feels that it can't hurt. I personally don't think it is prolonging anything.
We just took my mom off. She is still in the mild/moderste stage but we are trying to figure out the source of her dizzyness and her geriatrician said it is a known cause. Howevet, fyi, the neurologist who originally prescribed it scoffed at that suggestion.
You didn't ask but I am volunteering that the one drug I do feel helped her was Lexapro. Just a tiny dose but I think it was enough to lighten her outlook and help her sustain a better mood.
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Reply to Jennyjenjen
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My mom was prescribed it at first diagnosis about 4 or 5 years ago. As her health proxy I made the decision to stop it once she could no longer get to dr's appts and moved into MC a couple of years later. There didn't seem to be any point. I haven't noticed any difference, for better or worse,
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Reply to WellRockGrrl83
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When my husband was mid Stage 5 dementia, I was concerned that the Donepezil might be causing side effects. He'd been taking it for 3 years, but his dementia was progressing rapidly. Doctor, a geriatric specialist, didn't think Donepezil was of any benefit by that time. So with doctor's approval, I decreased his dose incrementally until he was off of it. His symptoms became worse. What I'd thought might be side effects of the med were still there. The question was, were his symptoms worse because he no longer took Donepezil, or were they worse because that was the natural trajectory of his mixed dementia?

I took this up with his doctor. I suggested that DH start taking Donepezil again. I would (more or less) scientifically record symptoms on a calendar to see if DH MIGHT improve or if he'd become worse. Why not give the medicine another chance? Doctor agreed, so DH went back on Donepezil. I kept a calendar for the next four months or so. I noted DH's relevant behavior, which was really not so scientific because who was to say that his behavior was always relevant to his dementia? But what I was really looking for was patterns, and there were some, all downward. I could see no real effect of Donepezil to improve anything, and DH and I were together 24/7, so I observed everything he did. So, again with doctor's agreement, I tapered off until, for the second time, he was no longer taking Donepezil at all. He continued on the downward slide and is now Stage 7.

This test was a lot for me to do at a time when I was already strained to the max with all the things that had to be done for DH. However, I did get some peace of mind by "proving" (sort of) that we'd gone as far as we could go on Donepezil and that there was no point in giving it anymore.
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Reply to Fawnby
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DonnaHC 6 hours ago
Thank you for sharing!
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The thought is that it may improve quality of life and as long as there are no side effects there is no harm taking it 🤷
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Reply to cwillie
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We started this a month ago to combat the meanness.
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Tina1923 Mar 24, 2026
Haloperidol was the only drug that actually helped my brother. It made him more his happy self. Sadly he passed Sunday.
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My mother began this medication years ago when her dementia was mild. Remained taking it until she passed away a week ago. The last stage lasted four months and we asked about discontinuing it. The physician was concerned discontinuing would create a steep decline with agitation and other side affects.

It is entirely the health care proxy decision. With this late stage disease you really have to go with your gut instincts.

Hugs and prayers during this challenging period.
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Reply to AMZebbC
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It's my understanding that the drug Donepezil will do nothing to help with any of the late stages of dementia. It's usually given early on in a dementia diagnosis in "hopes" that it will slow down the progression of the disease. However it doesn't help everyone and those that it does, it's usually only for about 6 months or so that it seems to help.
So whoever is now moms POA, should just tell her doctor that they don't want her on any more drugs than absolutely necessary and that Donepezil is definitely not necessary at this stage of the game.
And who in their right mind would want to prolong this horrific disease of dementia anyway? I'm just saying.
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Reply to funkygrandma59
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I just went to claudecode. I'm a big fan and asked the same question . this is what i got back.

There's an established (if debated) clinical rationale for continuing donepezil in someone already on it, partly because discontinuation can trigger a noticeable step-down in function. But initiating it for the first time at late stage 6 / early stage 7 is a much harder position to defend. You're taking on the side effects and the medicalizing of her final stage without the history of it potentially having slowed her decline to this point.
Common side effects at this stage aren't trivial either — nausea, diarrhea, sleep disturbance, muscle cramps, and in some cases agitation. For someone who may already have difficulty communicating discomfort, these can quietly reduce quality of life in ways that are hard to detect.
The honest clinical picture: initiating donepezil this late has very little evidence behind it. Most guidelines and geriatric specialists would consider this a judgment call at best, and many would not recommend it.
I would go back to the doctor and ask specifically: "Why are we starting this now, for the first time, at her current stage? What outcome are we hoping for, and how will we know if it's working or causing harm?"
If the answers feel unsatisfying, you're well within your rights to decline it — and you may also want to ask for a referral to a geriatrician or palliative care physician who specializes in late-stage dementia. A second opinion here is completely appropriate.
You're asking exactly the right questions.
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Reply to firsttimer1
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You are not a monster, and it’s a good question. If you aren’t satisfied with the answer, try another doctor. Bear in mind that some doctors expect family to want to prolong life as long as possible, and you may need to be clear about the way you think.
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Reply to MargaretMcKen
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firsttimer1 Mar 18, 2026
i don't think some doctors want to prolong life, i think that's the defacto position of just about all of them., epecially when they're not yet fully stage 7
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