Chapter 574 - One Day Out of So Many
I typed the chapter title to this post last Saturday, intending to describe, in great detail, one day in the life of my PDP. I haven't been up to the task, not even now, but I must do at least part of the chore, simply to rid my mind of it. At this time I am tired, woolly headed, sluggish, and finger movements cause pain in my lower right arm.
I have been awake since 0300, at first resisting for an hour the temptation to listen to Radio National but a gave up at 0400 to listen to the news after which someone knowledgeable described the differences between the Yank and Oz methods of choosing High/Supreme Court justices, both are political when all is said and done but the Yank method pretends not to be. After that the scheduled programming failed, being replaced by the weirdest music I have ever heard (perhaps I was dreaming?) for about 30 minutes.
She had last woken me at midnight as she asked for a pillow to be removed from its usual position beneath her feet and I noted that st the time she had no dyskinesia. For at least an hour before 0600 her legs had kicked for short periods but I hadn't bothered to get up and check until 0550 when I changed the current night rate of 2.5 to the current day rate of 6.0 but gave no Morning Dose as I did not wish to bring her into wakefulness. By 0555 the dyskinesia stopped, she remained asleep as indicated by not answering simple questions. She remained asleep without dyskinesia at checks at 0605, 0630 and 0712. She was awake on her back at 0730 and without dyskinesia. Then the normal transfer onto the commode, into the bathroom then onto the pedal machine until the Wild Dog carer arrived to shower her; no dyskinesia. Ate her usual breakfast without dyskinesia. At 1015 she is in her sewing room; no dyskinesia. After I watch a webinar about how male carers must take care of themselves I will return to this typing, perhaps.
Back again at 1400.Up until lunchtime she had been wrecking the small cane basket she had started working on a few weeks ago. She has not been able to explain to me why she needs to pull out the woven cane around the hand holes at the ends of this small basket, maybe 30x150x400 mm. A couple of days ago I found her pulling out threads of the seams at the bottoms of her trousers. Later I noticed the side seams of both legs were open for about 100 mm, the stitching at the bottoms of both legs had been removed and scrap of the fabric was on the floor. One day the boxes of games and puzzles were removed from the cupboard and she began assembling a rectangle of shapes of one puzzle. Perhaps it was too difficult, perhaps it bored her; she packed the lot back into the relevant boxes and I later returned everything to the cupboard. She is disinterested in live TV and series or movies on the 2 or 3 subscriptions I have for her except for "When Calls the Heart" which must have 7 or 8 seasons that she repeatedly watched, at least 4 times.
Friday 9th October, the day before her birthday, I declared "A Dyskinesia Free Day", for I never saw her legs "kicking" for the whole day between dawn and late evening. The flow rates had been 2.5 and 6.0. The days before had been awful days. The following day, her 78th birthday, I kept the same pump settings. Except that from 0530 the dyskinesias were bad but I got her to sleep laying on her RHS. After setting the day rate at 0612 I had to rotate her onto her LHS to stop the kicking. She woke at 0700 back on her RHS but the dyskinesias did not stop so I slid her onto the commode, hurting her leg on the slider board in the process, no piddle on the pot so I wheeled her to the pedals and she was not fully alert, answered questions with grunts. Then she became completely unresponsive although her feet continued to move with the pedals (a pair of slippers is glued onto the pedals) . Her oxygen level varied between a low of 94% and a high of 97%., her BP 141/90 and pulse 73. She remained zombie-like; when the Wild Dog carer arrived about 0800 I had the carer put pull-ups and pad on her while I held her upright with a velcro belt around her waist then returned her bed until 0905 when I found her fully awake, feet "feeling like lead" and her head tingling. So back onto the commode and under the shower where she washed herself. During the day she had 3 phone calls to wish her happy birthday. For an hour from 1500 I returned her to bed to sleep; dyskinesias had been bad.
Sunday began badly, although very interestingly. At 0705 she was quite sure she was "falling out of bed". I tried assuring her that was not possible because the covered side rails prevented that, which had no impact on her confidence at all. She was sure that the bed tilted side ways. After I had a quick shower I transferred her onto the commode where she sensed she was falling sideways. When the Wild Dog carer arrived at 0750 her falling sensation had left her. Later that morning I found her with a ring binder full of at least 100 empty sleeves. She had discovered that many of the sleeves were upside down. I pointed out that hardly mattered because the sleeves were empty. She continued checking each sleeve and reversing those found to be upside down.
During that morning I puzzled about her "falling" sensation, that the bed "tilted". I remember months ago her saying that her bed sloped to the side; I disproved that was not so by checking the bed with a spirit level and that seemed to satisfy her. Then I began wondering whether the cessation of dyskinesia when she was rotated either left or right when laying in bed may have been a similar problem. Perhaps a common cause of both symptoms may be faulty interpretation of the vestibular apparatus (I consulted Google) of her inner ear. When I mentioned to the neurologist that her body position effected her dyskinesia he responded with "I have heard of that happening." I wonder whether he heard of the cause? Perhaps he was not curious about such things? After I just now took her to the loo I asked her to tilt her head back, forth and sideways, asking what sensations she experienced. All she could say was "I don't know."
The 4 male participants in the webinar I watched this morning were each asked what comments from friends and relatives were unhelpful. They responded with "You are doing a great job." and directions from professionals during 10 minute consultations that carers follow orders, administer the medications as directed and report back, in a month or six. Neither professional nor non-professionals are entitled to say such such things until putting in a 24x7x52 shift at the coal face.
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