Saturday, September 16, 2017

GUY’S GOTTA TALK ABOUT…Alzheimer’s #10: Time Traveling With My Dad

Dad’s diagnosis of Alzheimer’s stayed hidden from everyone until I took over the medical administration of my parents in 2015. Once I found out, there was a deafening silence from most of the people I know even though virtually all of them would add, “My _____ had Alzheimer’s…” But there was little help, little beyond people sadly shaking heads. Or horror stories. Lots of those. Even the ones who knew about the disease seemed to have received a gag order from some Central Alzheimer’s Command and did little more than mumble about the experience. Not one to shut up for any known reason, I started this part of my blog…

I love the concept of time travel.

My favorite set of movies are the BACK TO THE FUTURE Trilogy.

My wife and I just spent the past week binge-watching Series 5 of DR. WHO.

STAR TREK (all of the series!) have great fun playing with time travel – doing some of the most impressive episodes of all time and introducing the entire Mirror Universe…

I LOVE TIME TRAVEL!!!!

However. Captain Kathryn Janeway in the Star Trek series, VOYAGER, had one of the most succinct criticisms of time travel I’ve ever heard. In the episode “Future’s End”, she says, “Time travel - from my first day on the job as captain, I swore that I would never let myself get caught up in one of these God-forsaken paradoxes. The future is the past, the past is the future...it all gives me a headache.”

I used to laugh at that, but since Dad starting sliding from Stage Four firmly into Stage Five of Alzheimer’s, her complaint has suddenly struck close to home.

Talking to Dad, I get headaches petty regularly these days. Dad’s mind slides from sometime in 1941 when he was just ten years old, to the present. There are moments when he forgets that my mom passed away (14 months ago now) only to remember that she did almost before the words leave his mouth.

He’ll call and ask where mom is…and after talking to him for a few minutes, I realize he’s talking about HIS mother. She died in 1954. Dad was only 23 and on leave from the Air Force because she was ill. His own father had died when he was sixteen.

In the previous 100 words, starting with “Talking to Dad…” you went from 2017 to 1941, back to 2017, then the middle of 2016 and onto 1954. That’s 70 years + 70 years + 1 year + 63 years, for a grand total of time travel years of 204 years.  

I’ll never know exactly how Dad felt either of those days because he just goes into a factual explanation about how his dad was napping while he was on the phone with some girl. After a while, Dad noticed that his father had stopped breathing. He gets even more factual and brief after that, ending with, “June took care of most of it.” June was my aunt. She was all of 29 when her mother died.

At any rate. The disease has made my father into a time traveler – a lost time traveler at that. While I’m still firmly rooted here, for him, he’s not unsure of what day or time it is, he has no real perception even of what year it is.

“For example, the perception of an ocean sunset combines a multitude of visual impressions; a vast color palette with numerous shapes (a round red sun, the line of the horizon, purple clouds of all shapes and sizes, etc.). But the experience is more than just visual. The sound of the waves and the gulls flying overhead. The smell and the taste of the salt water and the way the warm breeze feels against your face. You may be enjoying the moment with friends, and this also becomes a part of the overall experience, and of the memory.

“It is the hippocampus that sorts and compares these impressions (like the sunset) and creates a memory. Memories at this stage are short-term memories. The hippocampus then decides if a particular memory will be committed to long-term memory.

“So it is not surprising that forgetting a recent event (short-term memory) is one of the very first symptoms of this disease.”

OK – short term is scrambled so he forgets what happened yesterday. What about the skipping around?

“Patients with Alzheimer's disease…received tests of recall and recognition, word-completion priming, and incomplete-picture priming. [They] had impaired recall and recognition…[and] impaired word-completion priming. [They also] had intact incomplete-picture priming, a form of priming shown to be perceptual in normal subjects. These results provide…evidence for a dissociation between two components of repetition priming, perceptual priming…and nonperceptual priming... Preserverd perceptual priming in AD may be mediated by the occipital regions that are relatively spared in AD; compromised nonperceptual priming may be mediated by temporal regions that show dense neuropathological changes early in AD.”

In English? How about this: Based on tests that looked at , Alzheimer’s people have trouble remembering and recognizing things like pictures, words, and common sentences (Like, “See Jane run,” or pictures of places, people, or things). People can usually recognize words that are made up of words they already know – “airplane” for example, “air” and “plane”. They have more trouble with words they’re unfamiliar with, for example “Alzheimer’s”.

They also have trouble repeating actions unless they’re used to them. Another problem they run into is that there’s a weak connection with what’s happening “now” to Dad and what happened in the past. He’s experienced past events more often, so he remembers them. Current events aren’t attached to anything – except past events – Dad knows what it’s like for someone close to you to die. He remembers HIS mother dying. But not Mom dying and mentioning the current event sparks the past event. Ideas, language, and how he responds to various people in various situations – are damaged early on in Alzheimer’s.

So – Dad’s memories skip all over the place whenever something that’s happening “now” recalls something that happened “then”.

I still love time travel – I just hate watching my dad travel in time. It recalls to mind a STAR TREK: Deep Space 9 episode in which Captain Sisco’s son ages while the captain stays the same age and is snapped into his son’s life at different times. We’ll talk more about “The Visitor” next time and how it feels like what’s happening to Dad.


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