Hi everyone. Two weeks ago, my 85-year-old father with Parkinson's contracted a case of pneumonia. He also had a UTI at the time. The hospital treated him with two different antibiotics for seven days. At the end of the seven days, they discharged him to rehab. For the first three days that he was there, he seemed to be doing well, all things considered. He was eating, drinking, doing PT, talking (as well as he can). Then on the fourth day, he made an about face. He became irritable and was uncommunicative. By the fifth day, he stopped eating, drinking, talking, and even quit opening his eyes. Today, they put him on an IV for hydration and started giving him oxygen. He was running a low-grade fever as well. The most recent chest x-ray showed that the recent pneumonia had completely cleared. Blood tests showed only mildly elevated BUN and creatinine. They said EVERYTHING else was in perfect range. His blood pressure is 120/70 and as of this evening his temperature had returned to normal and his oxygen rate had gone from 87 percent to 97 percent. Though they have not yet received the results of the urine culture, they did say that the initial quick-test showed a lot of bacteria. I honestly felt after leaving my dad today, that he would not survive much longer. He was so unresponsive. My heart is breaking. My question is: If the culture does show a UTI, could that be the cause of all of this, or should I truly prepare for the worst? It's been a loooong two weeks...
Cwillie, before the pneumonia, my Dad was doing fine for someone with late-stage Parkinson's. He was eating, drinking, talking (he talks very softly and broken with the Parkinson's), watching TV and enjoying the attention from the aides at the Assisted Living where he and my Mom live. I saw him on Thursday afternoon two weeks ago. He seemed extra tired, but still eating and functioning. By Friday afternoon, he had started to run a fever, and by Saturday, he was refusing to eat, drink, open his eyes--everything that he is doing now. HOWEVER, after being the hospital for a few days with IV antibiotics he showed a great deal of improvement--back to his old self. The hospital transferred him to a local Rehab/Nursing Home for rehab. After three days there, he began to show the same signs he showed the first couple days in the hospital--no eating, no drinking, striking out at the aides (something he has NEVER done before this), spitting his food and pills out at them, not opening his eyes.
He may indeed be ready to pass on. I just don't know. And, no Pam, I have never witnessed a resuscitation. All I know is that my Dad made it clear over and over again that he wanted EVERYTHING done to keep him alive. It may be beneficial to know that he does not now nor ever has had any kind of heart trouble, nor has anyone in his family. His relatives have all died of cancer.
Just about anything could happen next. I hope additional treatment for a UTI will resolve the entire issue. Know that you are doing the best you can, whatever happens.