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My mom has a few medical conditions or issues.
she’s had two total knee replacements, and a neck surgery. she’s also anemic, has anxiety, and expressive aphasia. Her healthy started to decline shortly after her neck surgery for some reason. She has expressive aphasia but brain scans and everything else looks normal and no damage to brain, and no strokes. But she greatly suffers from cognitive impairments . She has memory issues, she has a hard time understand or listening to what anyone is saying or answering questions, she’s confused about things a lot of the time. She did recently start getting vitamin b12 injections due to pretty low levels. Some days her confusion and stuff are better and then there’s some times where it’s get really bad. I think some of it has to sue with the stress of her ongoing medical issues such as her chronic back pain, her neck surgery failing, and just overall pain from arthritis and stuff. Can all this stress be causing ongoing issues of cognitive function? No doctors can find anything wrong with her brain, her heart is healthy, and everything is relatively fine.. we think her neck surgery could be the cause of her expressive aphasia even with no damage in the brain showing.. she also was a heavy alcoholic for years but for a few years now she’s been sober.

Have the medical evaluations included seeing a neurologist for testing and opinion?
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Reply to Daughterof1930
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Anesthesia from any major surgery can cause dementia type symptoms. They often go away over time but sometimes they don't, but are permanent.
Then you add years of alcohol abuse on top of that and the damage that that does to your body and brain, and then expressive aphasia on top of that and you're pretty much guaranteed cognitive decline.
Her doctors shouldknow that.
Plus people with expressive aphasia "are likely to have difficulty with cognitive processes such as attention, short-term memory, decalrative memory and executive functioning."
So your mom has a lot going against her right now. I would make sure that she has all of her legal ducks in a row, like POA's, Will, MOST or POLST forms and the like before her mind gets much worse.
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Reply to funkygrandma59
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Brains are complicated, and the ways in which they can have issues are also complicated.

You talk about expressive aphasia and scans, so I assume your mom has a neurologist. Has she seen this neurologist in a while? Maybe the ongoing pattern over time would give some clues (even if they weren’t sure what was going on at the beginning).

There is a variation of frontotemporal dementia (non-Alzheimer’s) known as primary progressive aphasia. There are different types, most of which seem to start with difficulty expressing, but some of which progress to difficulty understanding. I can’t say if imaging is good at picking them up.

Here’s the Mayo Clinic info:

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/primary-progressive-aphasia/symptoms-causes/syc-20350499

That’s going too far of course here – suggesting a diagnosis category just from a one paragraph description on the Internet! Absurd. The point is that there are lots of subtle patterns that only a neurologist could pick up. This is just an example.

So I guess what I’m really suggesting that for neurologic things the diagnosis is all in the details – so seeing the neurologist again, if it’s been a while—for update, or a new one might be your best bet.
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Reply to Rumbletown
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How stressful & puzzling for you.

How is Mom's hearing? Full hearing tests done? Auditory processing, not just hearing?

Is there any susupicion of a lifelong neurodiversity issue eg ADHD or Autism?

This may sound completely wacky.. but people with auditory hallucinations (aka hearing voices) can present as very distracted. The sounds they hear makes it very hard to hear others, to concentrate or remember things later. Any suspicion of something strange like that going on?
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Reply to Beatty
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Did they do just CT scans ?

Or have they done an MRI with contrast ?

My sister’s dementia wasn’t detected on CT images but it was on the MRI with contrast last year . She’s 69 now but was having symptoms for a a couple of years before diagnosed. It did get worse after her back surgery last year . Anesthesia caused a step down .
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Reply to waytomisery
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If she has chronic back pain, does she take opioids? If so, please consider she is overmedicating herself. My MIL did after her surgery to repair a broken back.

Her history of heavy alcoholism could mean she has "wet brain" dementia (specific to alcoholics).

https://americanaddictioncenters.org/alcohol/risks-effects-dangers/wernicke-korsakoff-syndrome

How old was she when her aphasia started? What reason for the aphasia was ever given by her doctor?
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Reply to Geaton777
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At age 65, she would normally be in charge of her own health, yet you seem very involved. Does she like (or object to) your level of interest in it? Have the doctors suggested any reason for her complaints, as they can't find anything wrong?
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Reply to MargaretMcKen
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MargaretMcKen Jul 30, 2024
This post was intended to question delicately whether M might be making it up for attention. That's too blunt, but you sometimes have to wonder.
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