Mom has been hard of hearing for years, and she has never been a good listener, but lately it's been a little different. Sometimes her responses are incoherent. Sometimes I'll say something and she'll stare blankly at me as if I just asked her "What's 371 divided by 13?" before responding. Sometimes I'll speak at a normal tone of voice and she'll understand from across the room. A while ago I was sitting across the table and said, in a normal tone of voice, "Take your pills, Mom," and it was as if I didn't say anything. I know her hearing isn't that bad. (And she has no problem with taking her pills.)
Is it possible for cognitive decline to cause hearing loss or comprehension problems that seem like hearing loss? Is there a way I can test this through observation?
Not sure if you can "test" it. One day she could be with it and the next day not. One moment she could be with it the next ...
Dementia is a progressive Disease. My Mom had changes every month. Some decline faster than others.
My own DH is a brilliant man--like genius level smart, but to talk to him (or try to, I should say) you;d think he was "slow". He cannot hear, so by the time the original comment or question has been posed, you get the feeling he's not "all there".
I have heard and read that deafness can cause neural decline--you don't hear, you stop thinking and you don't "get" all of what is being said.
My kids all think dad is showing signs of dementia. He's not. He just can't hear.
Please don't assume that she has dementia, it will cause frustration for everyone because the real problem is being dismissed, if there is a problem.
Sometimes I don't hear everything because my head is stuffy or there is back ground noise that is interfering, I have no hearing loss, been checked by both the above to rule out treatable issues.
Good luck getting to the bottom of this.
Good luck!
Of course not every person who has dementia has hearing loss.
John Hopkins Dr Frank Lin says your odds increase of developing dementia with the degree of hearing loss. This from a 12 year study.
https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/healthy_aging/healthy_body/the-hidden-risks-of-hearing-loss
Definitely have her ears an hearing checked, see if the aids are working properly, are correctly adjusted for her needs, are not clogged with earwax, and have good batteries.
My mom's aids are always getting clogged.
For m mom though, it's a combination. Hard of hearing and sometimes not understanding a word or two, just blanking out on the meaning. Sometimes it seems like she loses the ability to follow a sentence, thengets it back.
I also suspect she play games at times too. Acts like she doesn't understand me and then puts on a big show of abjectly and tearfully apologizing, so I'll feel sorry for her.
All this is to say that it can be really difficult to tease apart hearing loss from declining cognition. The first thing it to rule out whatever you can with the ears and the hearing aids. Then go from there.
Mom doesn't have hearing aids, and I doubt that I could convince her to see an ear doctor. She's going to have to be almost stone deaf before she'd even consider it!
Hearing loss is a confused beast. Manys the time I have to figure out a missing word to know what the speaker is saying. And trying to understand children is a lost cause. Even the female voice at times is a loss.
My Mum fought a hearing test for about 5 years. At least 2 more to get & actually wear the hearing aides.
Now a few years later, after a stroke, she refuses to wear them at all. Missing out on so much conversation. Tells me her news, then hangs head & disengages. I try every visit to have a 1:1 chat so she can lip read.
Attention span is only about 3 sentences now. Doesn't have a dementia diagnosis (yet) but they are many signs.
Me: "Mom, I think we should start preparing for the on-coming hurricane."
Mom: "I remember when Joe and Ester lived in Jacksonville and Ester was scared because a hurricane was coming..."
I am partly deaf since I was a baby due to my cerebral palsy. I can hear voices, but I need to read lips to understand the subjects. Even though I wear hearing aids, I don’t like using the phone because of my hearing loss.
Get your mom's attention before you speak. I find that elderly people who have dementia, with hearing difficulties or not, have a very low attention span to grasp the conversation.
I ask her "why do you think I would say a word like that in a conversation about x,y,z?"
"Oh I don't know."
Well, she does know.
It did concern me a little because I thought that confusion or something was setting in, but I swear down, she is still all there mentally.
One of the best ways I knew she was in denial of her hearing loss was when I took her to her primary and spoke up about it. The Primary Care doctor totally understood and said to us both, "That is fixable we can get you tested and get a hearing aid for you."
To which mom responded, "Well sometimes I'm really not listening."
Please, if that was true you would not have asked me why I'm buying my husband a red and a blue silk PIE for his birthday last year. (Tie)...
I told mom that if I ever lose my hearing I'd run out and get a hearing aid. Some seniors feel embarrassed to wear them. I'd be more embarrassed about asking how the pies tasted when they're wearing their new birthday tie.
I later asked a hearing specialist about having my mom wear hearing aids. When we discussed that she had the Parkinson’s and dementia, she encouraged me not to force my mom to get them. She said that although my mom had some hearing loss, the main problem was the mental process of thinking through what she had heard. For Mom, she needed time for the brain to process, so even hearing well would not change that.
That being said, there is a link with hearing loss and dementia. For those who are younger (like me), clear hearing is important and when hearing loss has occurred and isn't treated, studies have shown that dementia can be linked to this. So if you're younger and having hearing loss, it is good to get it checked and get the necessary devices to improve your hearing.
I just pretend that I accept she hasn't heard me and give her the information again.
She has a Bone Anchored Hearing Aid, which she makes all sorts of excuses not to use and I'm sure that's because she knows she won't have an excuse for "not hearing" things!
Grandma used to say, in response to parenting questions, you gotta just keep them and love them. I hope somebody, someday, will treat me so kindly, lol.
She also has dementia, but sometimes she fakes poor hearing of something that she doesn't want to hear. One day I said, it is time for getting ready to go to the doctor's. "What?" 3 times, and I grinned, asking if she was teasing me. She giggled and said Yes.