Follow
Share

Mom is losing her vocabulary, her speech is full of pronouns. She blames it on aging.


We noticed sometimes when people ask her a simple question, she replies with completely irrelevant answers. For example, she’s at a party, some one asks her “where do you live?” She would come up with replies having nothing to do with such a simple question.


She has been to an audiologist to have hearing checked and it is within normal range.


I wonder what kind of impairment this is?


We have been asking her to see a doctor but she has refused and insisted that she’s just getting old and it is normal.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
She also says things like: there’s person who was sitting on the west, instead of on the left. When we asks her, do you mean, right or left? She just glazes over with no response.

when someone asks her, where is your new place? Instead of answering “it’s just a mile west of the airport”, she gestures wildly with both hands trying to draw an imaginary map in the air, but of course nobody understands what she’s trying to do.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

When was the last time your mom saw her doctor?

I wouldn't ask her to got for this specific issue; I'd ask her to go for a regular checkup, get her flu shot, make sure that shes gotten any other vaccines/tests that her doctor might think necessary.

In advance of her appointment, send the doctor a brief, bullet-pointed note about what you are noticing.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

I agree it sounds like time for Mom to have an evaluation. Explain to her that most health insurances require a yearly exam and so do doctors or they will drop you as their patient and she will have to start over with someone new.

Do not make mention of Alzheimer’s to her. No one ever said, “Oh boy! I’ll bet I have dementia!” But everyone in your family needs to know what the future holds.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I'm not saying that your mom has Alzheimer's disease. But I will say that this is how my former mother-in-law, who does have Alzheimer's disease, talked eventually (that is, a few years into the disease process) while she could still talk.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I agree she needs to be evaluated by her primary physician, this kind of problem is called aphasia and it can have various causes

https://www.asha.org/PRPSpecificTopic.aspx?folderid=8589934663§ion=Causes
(from the American-Speech-Language-Hearing Association)
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Umm, we can only guess. Using words that approximate to the meaning of the word you can't retrieve when you want it is a common early sign of cognitive problems (nominal aphasia, I think, someone confirm?), but you really want to take her to a neurologist.

*Some* decline is normal, she's right; so reassure her that you would like the neurologist to confirm that this is the case and rule out potentially avoidable and/or treatable causes of anything more sinister. Why put up with a nuisance if you can do something about it AND possibly stop it getting worse?
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
Ahmijoy Oct 2019
Very true, CM. I’ve said this on here before, but I remember quite clearly in the months after hubby had his stroke and it left him with aphasia. We were in a crowded restaurant and when he couldn’t think of the word “sink”, he said in a voice loud enough for the entire restaurant to hear that I wash dishes in the toilet. 😳😁
(3)
Report
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter