When It Isn’t Really Senility
by Robin Marantz Henig
When
Jane Simpsons mother, then 91, started showing signs of memory
loss in December 2007, Ms. Simpson thought age had finally caught
up with her. As this had been a gradual process, and considering
her age, we were not unduly alarmed just saddened that it
seemed we were losing my mother mentally, she wrote in an
e-mail to this blog.
But on a visit
six months later, Ms. Simpson, a 61-year-old advertising copywriter
in North Carolina, was struck by how much worse her mothers
memory loss had become and by her confusion about everything happening
around her.
Just typical
91-year-old behavior? Just the first signs of the inevitable slide
toward dementia we all may face if we live long enough? Not at all.
Since the 70s,
geriatric specialists have been aware of many unusual causes of
memory loss, confusion and disorientation in older people. These
include not just medical conditions ranging from urinary tract infection
to hydrocephalus to the flu, but also side effects from many commonly
used medications.
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the rest of the article
March
19, 2009
Copyright
© 2009 New York Times
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