My 92 year old mother has been receiving injections for her macular degeneration for several years. This past year, she had a stroke and is now in stage 6 of dementia and has been on Hospice care for almost 8 months. Should I continue to have her eyes treated to maintain her sight or will stopping at this point create other problems?
Sending support your way!
Since reading is no longer an option with his dementia, Dads optometrist suggested that I remain watchful at meals to see if dad could recognize the foods he was eating and if he could see where he was going in his walker. He explained that with dads case, he wouldn’t go completely dark but would have foggy spots. this advice has been so helpful. I have not taken dad back for another shot and he seems to be seeing what he needs to see. Since every case is different, please reach out to your moms eye care doc to see what he/she suggests.
Is she is pain when she gets the injection?
Is it safe and easy to transport her to the doctor to get the injection?
Is she compliant at the doctors office or is it a struggle to get her to cooperate?
Is this for both eyes? If not how is the vision in her other eye? Could she manage as she is now with reduced vision or vision in 1 eye?
I think the answers to these questions might make answering your question easier.
She may live another year even on Hospice will she and you be able to manage with the loss of vision in that eye (or both if it is effecting both eyes)
If getting the injections improve or stabilize the quality of her life I would continue, if they don't I would discontinue. But given my points above if it is no longer safe to transport her or if she is not compliant I would discontinue. Getting to the pain issue, pain can be managed either way you decide to go.
My Father is 95 and several years ago he had the series of injections once a month.
I believe he had a total of 10.
Anyway, after that he didnt go back and he can see enough to tell who you are and watch TV and even tell if the light is red or green.
Our mother (now 96) has been getting these shots to preserve as much eyesight as possible for a long time. She cut a trip to FL short many years ago, knowing something was wrong. Unfortunately the ophthalmologist who did examine her when she got back missed the problem, and she lost some sight in that eye, even though she requested another exam right away. She's been going every 4 months for retest and treatment of the other eye. Since starting dementia, because her hearing is SO bad, I plan to continue treatments to preserve as much eyesight as possible, so we are continuing treatments. If she can't really hear and loses her sight, what's left?
It's unfortunate that the move to MC closer to me resulted in a long drive to the doc's, but her only remaining activity is reading - newspapers, magazines and in particular, her favorite hobby is checking all the sales flyers in the Sunday paper. She was doing this when living alone and continues now. While she has regressed in time (40+ years) and more recently has a fear of falling so she relies on a wheelchair pushed by aides, and repeats herself all the time, she's still somewhat in the here and now, so the plan is to continue treatment.
If she were to have a stroke, I think the decision would have to fall on those questions:
Does she still read?
If not, what can she still see?
If she can still see, is it enough for her?
Can she cope with the trip to the doctor's office?
Can she get through all the testing done?
Can she tolerate the shots?
Consult with the doc might help too. They can sum up what they feel is/was her current ability and what might occur if treatments stop. The worst case seems to be some loss of central vision. Mom continued driving even after loss of full vision in that eye (we had to stop the driving when dementia came on board.)
One of the docs treating mom (was only our 1st or 2nd visit with him) questioned if we really felt it should continue! Given what I said above, I said yes. That was several years ago. He asked this because I related her hearing loss and dementia, but that shouldn't be the deciding factor - dementia has MANY levels and some can still function, albeit at a lower level, for a long time! This is the problem with many docs, PCPs and others - if they don't have experience with dementia, esp first hand with a relative of their own, they haven't got a clue! Even experience with one person isn't enough, as each person has their own path to follow!
For others regarding pain - I know mom seems to feel pain when they inject, and sometimes the next day (not always), so I generally take Extra Strength Tylenol with us and have her take it there, to try to ward off any pain afterwards. Generally she is fine the next day. Once or twice she complained of spots, but those are common and go away in a short time. I was unsure about pain caused by MD if not treated. I didn't think pain was involved, like say glaucoma, so I looked it up:
"Pain is not typically a symptom of macular degeneration. Most commonly people experience blurry or distorted central vision. ... No, age-related macular degeneration, or AMD, is a painless disease associated with aging and vision problems."
So, OP's mom should not need pain meds for this. It all comes down to how well she can still/might continue to see, or if she even needs to see. No idea how badly the stroke has impacted her. Consider her abilities (including whether she could cope with the testing/treatments), what she might like to do (reading, watching TV), what the doc says about current and future (pro/con). I do believe you can continue current treatments when going to hospice, as they are "maintenance". You'd only have to suspend hospice if something new (more serious than UTI or flu shots) came up that you want treated - they can advise you about that.
"Macular degeneration only affects the macula. So, your peripheral vision will remain intact. Meaning, you will not go completely blind, but if your macular degeneration gets acutely worse, you will fall under the 'legally blind' category."
I would think this would make reading and TV difficult, but not impossible. So, it would all come down to will she tolerate the testing and treatment and will it help at all (does she still actively read and/or watch TV?)
I remember arguing with one brother (the other was pretty much in the same camp) about being legally blind. Basically mom's vision was not correctable in the "bad" eye to better than 20/200, so she was LEGALLY blind in that one eye. Their interpretation of the term was that she WAS blind. BTW, the IRS/legal definition also doesn't allow you to claim blindness if only one eye is affected! While trying to explain this to him on the phone and driving, at night, I said hey, my "bad" eye is 20/60 (about the same as mom's "good" eye at the time), so let me take the glasses off and close my good eye - HEY, look, I'm still driving, I can still see and I haven't hit anything! I made my point to him.