I wish I could disagree, but I don't. My xH saw his medical doctor, his psychiatrist, and a therapist all within a six month span when he was first ramping up in symptoms. He desperately wanted to be better. He got horribly worse.
Would it have gotten even worse without medical intervention? I have no clue.
Impossible to know if your husband would had got worst without medical help. But it is a fact medical help didn't work and make him become worst than he was.
Anjae:
It is imperative we take our spouses to a neurologist at a University Hospital.
No, it isn't. MLC does not require a neurologist. In my opinion, it may required a good GP versed in hormones, especially the many effects of cortisol and adrenaline, and who is capable of asking for blood tests including vitamin and mineral levels.
Also, here, you can't just go to a neurologist at a University Hospital. We have a National Health Service, the University Hospitals are state owened.
We don't just decide, oh, I want the University Hospital neurologist. Those are for people that are refered by their GP, or their psychiatrist, or for people who had strokes or any other medical condition and where treated on a University Hospital, or another NHS hospital that may think people need a neurologist in one of those. There aren't those many University Hospitals neurologists here.
I wonder if the psychiatrist Treasur's husband is seeing has given him mental status tests, a MRI, SPECT or PET scan, talked with Treasur about personality changes, checked reflexes and for frontal release signs, or even asked him to draw a CLOCK.
Don't know how it is in the UK, here, as a general rule, psychiatrists do not do/ask for those tests. A GP may do. Both a psychiatrist of a GP can recommend a person to see a neurogist. Phychiatrists don't tend to ask for any tests, maybe aside blood tests to exclude thyroid problems.
Draw a clock? I can assure Mr J is perfectly capable of drawing a clock. So was my cousin. I can also assure Mr J, MLC aside, is fine. There is no degerenative illness.
Do you know that divorce rates have fallen in all age groups except for those in midlife? A Canadian neurologist who specializes in ftd mentions the stat in her lectures. Red flag is a change of spouse.
Where? I don't live in the US. Our divorce rate is much higher than 50%, more around 70%.
A change in spouse may mean many things other than ftd. Thyroid problems, depression, issues caused for lack of sleep, peri-menopause and menopause, etc. FTD is not the only thing that changes a spouse.
Layers couldn't care less. They make money out of divorces. Also, here, if a person wants to divorce someone with a mental illness of neuroligical degenerative disease, the person wanting to divorce will have to support the ill person for life. I fail to see how going for a psychatric diagnose or a neurological degenerative one for the MLCer would benefit anyone in my country. It wouldn't.
Different countries, different, laws. Same for divorce rates. I have written in several places that here, most young people do not marry, and a second marriage is rare, and getting rarer. People live together.
April 16, 2018, 06:47:09 PM »
It's a Catch-22 because we have no idea who will return to sanity 5 years down the road, and who is a ticking time bomb with a serious problem that should addressed.
Return to sanity in 5 years? For most MLCers that will not happen in 5 years. Maybe in 7, or 10 or 15. 5 years is short for many MLC crisis. I don't really think it is a catch 22 for most, if not nearly all MLCers. MLCers are having a MLC.
Flat affect.
Radical personality change.
Mania/euphoria.
Sleeplessness
hypersexuality
Family history of unipolar and bipolar depression.
Recent new SSRI.
Long term use klonipin in tandem with SSRI without psychiatrist oversight.
Radical change to spending patterns.
Loss of empathy.
Change to eye, speech pattern, and humor.
This are all pretty much standard MLC signs, or even depression signs, aside from the "Long term use klonipin in tandem with SSRI without psychiatrist oversight". The "Recent new SSRI" may, or may, have anything to do with it.
Most MLCers are not on a SSRI nor where at BD or after. People not in MLC also have problems with SSRI. They may, or may not, have anything to do with it.
You keep writing that bv and I don’t believe in MLC but that’s not true. The description and dynamics RCR writes are very accurate. However, there is currently no true medical description for MLC, even when there are tons of breakthroughs in brain research.
You don't. Bv goes around people threads saying their spouses have bvFTD, therefore, if they have bvFTD they do not have MLC. She has even gone so far as writing that MLC does not exist. You have also said something similar.
There was no medical description of many illnesses for years on end. It did not mean they didn't exist. So far, breakthroughs in brain research have done little to nothing when it comes to mental illness. They also haven't done much for dementias, aside from Parkinson's, some treatments reduce, or prevent the sympthoms from spreading. No brain research as yet solved Alzeimer's, for example (sadly, as my paternal grandmother has it and is getting worst and worst).
Yes, there are brain surgeries that where not possible in the past, there are many exciting things being discovered, but many things still don't have a solution. One day I am certain they will.