Do Drugs Affect Mental Ability A Lot During Initial Critical Care?
#1
Posted 30 October 2010 - 03:15 AM
I visit him twice a week and there are times when he is just deep in sleep from the meds, but other times he is awake for the whole visit. When he is awake, he doesn't seem to recognize me or to understand what I'm saying to him. He will just stare at the wall or floor and then all of a sudden he will smile for no reason at all and it's like he's in his own world. He will nod yes or no sometimes but a lot of the time he just looks at you like he doesn't understand.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that I'd like to know if anyone else experienced this in the first weeks of their recovery. Do the meds affect your mind so much that you appear to have brain damage? Or might he really have suffered some brain damage even though he didn't have a head injury? He lay on his floor for 12 hours after his accident before someone found him and called the ambulance...and he stopped breathing in the ambulance for a few minutes.
Am I just being too impatient or should I be asking his doctors to look into it? Sorry if I'm being a naive newbie but I'm got an awful feeling.
#2
Posted 30 October 2010 - 03:30 AM
Even if they tell you what it could be, keep observing closely and keep after them. Update them every time you see them and don't let them blow you off! They do not know him or his normal behavior. You must tell them that his behavior is not normal for him. You must press them to check him out!
Do you know how long he was not breathing? It only takes 3 minutes not breathing for brain cell damage to occur and 5 minutes for brain cell death to occur!
Has anyone figured out what happened during those 12 hours?
I have seen this both ways...
My husband was in a roll over accident some years ago and among other things did have a head injury, but no one was aware that something was wrong but me.
On the other hand, at one point my mother-in-law was in the hospital and answering the nurses questions just fine, but some of this and other behavior was not normal for her. We found out in her case she was being over medicated and when they lowered the dosage she went back to normal.
Edited by mcwriter, 30 October 2010 - 04:03 AM.
#3
Posted 30 October 2010 - 04:18 AM
mcwriter, on 30 October 2010 - 03:30 AM, said:
Even if they tell you what it could be, keep observing closely and keep after them. Update them every time you see them and don't let them blow you off! They do not know him or his normal behavior. You must tell them that his behavior is not normal for him. You must press them to check him out!
Do you know how long he was not breathing? It only takes 3 minutes not breathing for brain cell damage to occur and 5 minutes for brain cell death to occur!
Has anyone figured out what happened during those 12 hours?
I have seen this both ways...
My husband was in a roll over accident some years ago and among other things did have a head injury, but no one was aware that something was wrong but me.
On the other hand, at one point my mother-in-law was in the hospital and answering the nurses questions just fine, but some of this and other behavior was not normal for her. We found out in her case she was being over medicated and when they lowered the dosage she went back to normal.
From what I understand he had his accident around 2am, got up and walked around and asked for a ride home. He was taken home and helped into an arm chair and left alone to sleep it off. No one wanted to bother him because he does drink and sleep late but around 2pm the next afternoon someone finally found him slumped in the chair already paralyzed. He was speaking and asked to be moved to the couch,which he was, and asked for the ambulance to be called. While being loaded into the ambulance he stopped breathing and then started again on his own..don't know how long he stopped for or if it happened again on the way to the hospital. I got word of the accident about 4pm and finally got to see him around 7pm he was already sedated and has been in ICU ever since. We've been told it was just because of the sedation that he is acting so dopey, but I have a heavy feeling in my gut. I'm going up tomorrow to meet with his doctor but wanted to get an idea if I'm just rushing his recovery too much.
#4
Posted 30 October 2010 - 04:39 AM
when you go and talk to the doctor, he may very well try to tell you that it is the medication, that it is too early to tell anything or some other thing. Ask about tests that can be done. Ask for a neurologist to check him out. Ask them what kind and when.
Keep after them! If you do not get the action on this go to see the Patient Advocate of the hospital and they will help you.
You have to be the one to stand up for your husband, to stand up for his care and wave that red flag in their faces if you have to.
Be calm, assert yourself and be firm, but not hostile.
And please let us know how both of you are doing, okay?
Edited by mcwriter, 30 October 2010 - 04:40 AM.
#5
Posted 30 October 2010 - 04:44 AM
mcwriter, on 30 October 2010 - 04:39 AM, said:
when you go and talk to the doctor, he may very well try to tell you that it is the medication, that it is too early to tell anything or some other thing. Ask about tests that can be done. Ask for a neurologist to check him out. Ask them what kind and when.
Keep after them! If you do not get the action on this go to see the Patient Advocate of the hospital and they will help you.
You have to be the one to stand up for your husband, to stand up for his care and wave that red flag in their faces if you have to.
Be calm, assert yourself and be firm, but not hostile.
And please let us know how both of you are doing, okay?
Thank you very much mc...I was starting to feel like I was being an alarmist...I will report what I find out tomorrow...
#7
Posted 30 October 2010 - 05:43 AM
People do strange things both post-injury, and while they're heavily medicated. I know at one point I was in such excruciating pain that I felt the only way to convey my pain to the hospital staff after waking up was to immediately start ripping out all of the IVs and lines they had in me. I literally felt there was no other way to communicate to them how much I was hurting. It made complete sense to me at the time, but I was also under heavy narcotic sedation. I was later told that I looked like a maniac.
#8
Posted 30 October 2010 - 12:52 PM
Ditto McWriter's advice. The people who get good care are the one's with a family member deeply involved and willing to make a pest of themselves. Good doctors will appreciate the info from someone who know's the patient well.
Whatever has happened is done, and now the slow job of healing begins. Even with brain damage people get much better over time.
Prayers are with you.
#9
Posted 30 October 2010 - 04:48 PM
Memento Vivere
Memento Mori
#11
Posted 02 November 2010 - 08:55 PM
I feel much better now..and thanks for encouraging me to ask about his mental state...I was afraid I was just being his surrogate hypochondriac.
#12
Posted 04 November 2010 - 12:24 AM
Somehow it always makes things a little easier to deal with and understand when you get answers.
And look!--you learned a new thing and now you know to go ahead and assert yourself and find out when you have questions.
Good Luck to you.
#13
Posted 21 December 2010 - 06:55 PM
#14
Posted 22 December 2010 - 12:55 AM
He was injured in May 2010, and came home in July 2010, and now it's December and things really are getting better.
The shock, the injury, the meds, the psychological dynamics of such an injury all contribute, I think, to what you are seeing, but I would definately ask about his O2 levels and the O2 mix he is receiving as well as getting a list of all his meds and the full extent of his injuries. The Medical Team should have already established a date to talk with you and the family, but since they haven't, you do it. Did he have some surgery? It sounds like he did.
My good wishes go to you, my Dear, and a big hug as well. This transformation you and he are facing is not an easy path, but it's not impossible.
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