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Addiction & Recovery

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enough

(13,495 posts)
Wed Dec 14, 2011, 06:50 PM Dec 2011

Alcoholism in the elderly. [View all]

There was an interesting post today in GD that got locked because it was off topic. The poster was looking for information to help deal with her (or his?) 80 year old mother with a serious alcohol problem. There were a number of interesting responses. I thought I would post it here. Here's the link:

http://www.democraticunderground.com/100216857#op

I'll be curious to see what people's experience is with this. I took care of my father, who died with Alzheimer's at 88. It took us a long time to understand what was happening to him because we assumed that his difficult behaviors were because of his life-long drinking problem.

I even had a doctor tell me he had "geriatric alcohol syndrome" while he was being delusional, paranoid, hostile and violent during a hospitalization for a medical problem. This MD told me to get him home and let him return to his normal amount of alcohol and he would calm down. He did, for a while.

Several months after we got the Alzheimer's diagnosis (he was 85), he became so difficult that it was going to be impossible to take care of him at home. He was a tall man with undiminished strength, and the rage was too much to contend with. At that point he was prescribed Seroquel (an anti-psychotic) which calmed him down to the point that he was able to live out another year at home.



The amazing thing to me was that on DAY ONE of taking the full dose of Seroquel he completely lost interest in alcohol. He never had another drop, never asked for one, never wanted one if someone around him was drinking. This is a person who had been drinking as heavily as he could daily for probably 70 years.




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