Follow
Share

I’m starting to wonder if my husband was misdiagnosed and that perhaps his issues in January were from taking Naltrexone that his PCP started him on. Up to that point, he was forgetful and sometimes confused but his mental state took a nose-dive when he tried to take the naltrexone and ended up in the hospital for 6 days. He is in memory care now but about the same as he was a year ago.

Find Care & Housing
Medication can definitely worsen dementia symptoms, I've seen it with my mother twice. Once when she took Scopolamine and began seeing mice running around on the floor. And then again with Cymbalta where she was SO out of it she'd fall out of her wheelchair and be lying on the floor not realizing she'd fallen. Both times her dementia improved when the meds were dxed. The dementia was still THERE, it just wasn't out of control like it was while on the meds.

Your DH is an alcoholic with Parkinson's. Both heavy drinking AND PD cause brain issues and dementia. Just the drinking alone is enough to cause encephalopathy or Wernicke Korsakoff syndrome. I doubt DH was "misdiagnosed"......he was just worse while taking the Naltrexone.

Dementia in a loved one is very difficult to accept, I know. Especially seeing them seemingly improving in managed care. 2 points. First, they're in a routine in MC where they're fed, medicated, showered and socialized regularly. Their world has been shrunken down to accommodate their limitations. There's nothing to cook, no thermostats to adjust, no tools to use, nowhere to get lost.....the most complicated things they have to deal with is the TV remote and the phone. And there's enough problems with those! Seeing DH in a structured, perfect environment is not the same as seeing him in a home environment where lots of chaos prevails and they cannot function.

Secondly, dementia is not linear. In other words they'll have good days and bad days. On good days you think, my God, he's really fine! I've made a mistake placing him! Refer to point #1 for why he's functioning so well. Plus, he's having a good day. The Bad days, on the other hand, will reinforce why he is living where he's living. Mom would have days where she could carry on a conversation pretty decently. Then go into her room and talk into the TV remote insisting it was the phone. She was brilliant at small talk.....which came from muscle memory. "Hi how are you, lovely outfit you're wearing today!" Saying thst would make the recipient suspicious that she had ANY dementia at all. But ask her a question that diverted from her rehearsed lines and she'd be lost. Showtiming can trick even doctors who aren't alert.

Dementia is tricky and changes like a chameleon. If DH is thriving where he's at, thank God and leave him be, that's my advice. Bringing him home can open up a Pandoras Box that is impossible to close up again.
Helpful Answer (12)
Reply to lealonnie1
Report
iameli 12 hours ago
Aging care should create a section with “best of” posts on specific situations. This one would be perfect for “When you’re second-guessing your decisions about your loved one with dementia”.
(6)
Report
See 1 more reply
"https://www.agingcare.com/questions/is-it-possible-for-someone-with-vascular-dementia-to-improve-enough-to-return-home-498513.htm"

Above is your first post. Gives a little more background.

Your husband has Parkinsons. A debilitating desease on its own. The final stages Dementia will come into the picture because its a neurological desease. I so hope you are not relying on PCP to care for your husband. He needs a Neurologist.

Besides the desease, he is an alchoholic which effects the brain too. " Wernicke-Korsakoff Syndrome (WKS), often colloquially called "wet brain, stems from the constant drinking of alchohol." Its a B1, thiamine deficiency. You could have him checked for that.

You don't say how old he is. If your husband is in memory care, there is a good reason why the NP signed for him to be placed there. She may have felt his care is too much for you. If you have not done it yet, you may want to see an Elder Lawyer about splitting your assets. His split going towards his care. When the money runs out, you then apply for Medicaid. Once Medicaid takes over, you can remain in the home, have a car and part or all of your monthly income to live on.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to JoAnn29
Report

When my dad was in hospital they put his sudden behaviour to that and delirium and says it was down to old age
he went in ok with gall bladder infection and they kept him in too long cancelling procedures and filling him with tablets
3 months later he was on deaths door
given weeks except by one consultant who screamed at them why is he out end of life when he isn’t
the rest put that and they never did change the notes despite a complaint
I forced them to release my dad before they kill him
18 months later dad is back to himself and they can’t understand how
the tablets induced a lot of symptoms and when I had them changed and only using pain killing tablets when extremely needed ( got milder alternative) - the dementia and delirium stopped
pain tablets break down to morphine which can really mess your body up
we also increased his water intake - Sips throughout the day rather than trying to get a glass down him which would have gave just run out of him
so I’d say go with your feelings and explore options but don’t stop medication yourself without talking to a doctor as it could be serious
I discussed alternative options and got alternatives
hospitals and doctors nowadays are lazy and treat people like disposable numbers
don’t always take what they say as gospel
but don’t diagnose yourself either. Best wishes
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Jenny10
Report

Naltrexone is a medication most commonly used to help treat opioid addiction/dependence or alcoholism. Is this why he was put on it? More info for context would be helpful.
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to Geaton777
Report

Yes. He was put on naltrexone for alcoholism. He was a heavy beer drinker. He hasn’t had a drink in 2 months. They took him off of his Parkinson’s meds when he was in the hospital. We had to get that straightened out on home health when he came home. The home health NP is the one that wrote up his incompetence letter so I could place him in a memory care facility.
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to Yesterdayanurse
Report

I would definitely look into that further. It does sound to me like Naltrexone was responsible. I've heard this same thing with other drugs.
Helpful Answer (0)
Reply to Auglet
Report

I don’t have any experience of this but I looked up Naltrexone on Medline Plus and along with other possible side effects it lists:

anxiety
nervousness
irritability
tearfulness
difficulty falling or staying asleep
increased or decreased energy
drowsiness
confusion
hallucinations

BUT as others have noted, Parkinson’s and long-term alcoholism can have serious mental/ emotional/ dementia-related or adjacent symptoms also.

I really think you should discuss this with his doctors. It sounds like memory care is the best place for him.
Helpful Answer (0)
Reply to Suzy23
Report

Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter