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She lives in a NH and the nurse called me the other night to say they had called an ambulance. She said my mother had been fine during dinner then during Bingo but when they went to wheel her back to her room, they found her slumped over in her wheelchair like she was asleep. They tried to wake her up, but she wouldn't respond at all. Her body was completely limp and her eyes were shut. They took her vitals, which were fine.

My immediate thought was stroke. When I got to the ER the EMTs said she had stirred a little on the way to the hospital, but was still pretty incoherent. She started vomiting in the ER, which is unusual for her. They ran tests and a CT scan didn't show any bleeding on the brain. The neurologist examined her and thought that a stroke was unlikely. She had more tests yesterday and the only thing they found was a UTI. She's been getting frequent UTIs over the years, but never had a reaction to one like this. I know UTIs in the elderly can present as a sudden behavioral or personality change but I didn't know they could cause a patient to become totally unresponsive like that.

She seemed a little (a very little) more coherent when I visited yesterday and they said they'd be keeping her there for a few days. She's being treated with an IV antibiotic.

Has anyone had a loved one have this reaction to a UTI?

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Wow it sounds like the doctors did everything right in my humble opinion, which is a good thing. And I know that UTI's are a real problem in old people and do cause temporary mental problems as a result. My father-in-law fell in the bathroom one night and my mother-in-law had to wrestle him back to his bed and call 911. He was delirious and out of his head so bad they had to strap him down. Turned out he had a UTI and as a result of the infection his body started a cascade effect of shutting down. They couldn't stop it and six months later he died. If only he had said something about not feeling well, they may have stopped it. Do some research about the UTI thing and how to prevent it so you can ask the right questions.
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Yes, my wife of 35 years had never before been unable to eat. Unable to stand...calls for me to help her to go to the bathroom...never makes it even one step. Unresponsive and has not yet spoken for a day. And my wife yesterday was at the Emergency Room for local abdominal pain DIAGNOSIS: UTI.
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My relative has multiple sclerosis. He is 73 years old and when he gets a UTI ( frequently) he becomes incoherent and his speech becomes very slurred. This happens even if he doesn't have a fever. Scary.
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