Thank you and bless you for that bit of advice. My next to the oldest sister has early dementia and it hurts me to see her that way. She had a stroke because of it, due to the fact that she lived alone, and picked and chose what medicine she wanted to take. No one knew she had early dementia until her stroke. Now my older brother lives with her. He lost his wife a few years back due to her having diabetes, and he just about gave up on living. He has no kids of his own, only a step daughter who is strung out on drugs and only calls him when she needs/wants drug money. So we convinced him to move in with our sister as he likes to feel/be needed and so far it is working out for the best for both of them. I will tell him about the coconut oil and to give her a spoonful a day. At this point; we will try anything. God bless and thanks again.
Thank you very much. I will try everything to get her back and as close to remembering as I can. It is a shame when your older sister calls you and then says "Momma." Our mother has been dead since I was 17 years old and now I'm 61. That ought to tell you how bad she is getting at times. It makes me want to cry.
My older sister is in a wheelchair and has been since she was 48. She is now 67. She had a brain aneurysm and died on us 3 times before they saved her at the hospital. She is paralyzed down the left side of her body. She is right handed and does everything for herself that she possibly can. I tried helping her but it got where she wanted more than I had to give, so I let her kids do the majority for her. Sometimes life gets too demanding.
Anyway, thanks again and God bless you for all your help. I know her daughter will appreciate this too.
I know what Alzheimers looks like. My grandmother died of it in the nineties. My grandfather heroically took care of her at home until she forgot how to breathe and died.
She was such a kind person all her life, but she was mean and difficult when she had the Alzheimers.
Coconut oil may reverse prion damage in early dementia
This is good to know about:
https://naturalsociety.com/new-study-coconut-oil-helps-remove-amyloid-plaques-brains-alzheimers-patients/
If you are vaxxed or forgetful, a spoonful a day would be a good idea IMO.
Thank you and bless you for that bit of advice. My next to the oldest sister has early dementia and it hurts me to see her that way. She had a stroke because of it, due to the fact that she lived alone, and picked and chose what medicine she wanted to take. No one knew she had early dementia until her stroke. Now my older brother lives with her. He lost his wife a few years back due to her having diabetes, and he just about gave up on living. He has no kids of his own, only a step daughter who is strung out on drugs and only calls him when she needs/wants drug money. So we convinced him to move in with our sister as he likes to feel/be needed and so far it is working out for the best for both of them. I will tell him about the coconut oil and to give her a spoonful a day. At this point; we will try anything. God bless and thanks again.
Hi Mary
Regarding early dementia, there ere are several things to try besides coconut oil.
Some people also try Lion's mane mushrooms or Gingko Biloba, some people try CBD oil.
Thank you very much. I will try everything to get her back and as close to remembering as I can. It is a shame when your older sister calls you and then says "Momma." Our mother has been dead since I was 17 years old and now I'm 61. That ought to tell you how bad she is getting at times. It makes me want to cry.
My older sister is in a wheelchair and has been since she was 48. She is now 67. She had a brain aneurysm and died on us 3 times before they saved her at the hospital. She is paralyzed down the left side of her body. She is right handed and does everything for herself that she possibly can. I tried helping her but it got where she wanted more than I had to give, so I let her kids do the majority for her. Sometimes life gets too demanding.
Anyway, thanks again and God bless you for all your help. I know her daughter will appreciate this too.
Oh that sounds very hard!
I know what Alzheimers looks like. My grandmother died of it in the nineties. My grandfather heroically took care of her at home until she forgot how to breathe and died.
She was such a kind person all her life, but she was mean and difficult when she had the Alzheimers.
It is very hard caring for someone with dementia