Dr GG, Neuro-Ophthalmologist, was a recommendation from Dr D, the
Retina Specialist who was a recommendation from Dr S, the ophthalmologist where
this daisy chain of doctors all started.
Each experience began differently but ended up pretty much
the same; lots of tests (which came back normal and/or inconclusive) and with
no definitive answer as to what was causing Miss Cathy’s loss of vision and
confusion….hell, I would have settled for speculation
but we usually got the verbal equivalent of a head scratch.
After a week or so of back and forth with the neurologist,
Dr A (and no answers), I found myself back to square one with Dr S, asking him
who he suggested that we see next. He told me to make an appointment for mom
with Dr D, a Retina Specialist, thinking there might be a problem with the blood
flow to the retina but (true to our track record thus far) Dr D could only
report that her retina was healthy and the blood flow was normal (which would
be great news under normal circumstances but as we were not living in normal circumstances).
The best thing I can say about the time we spent with Dr D
is that he recommended Dr GG.
And his office was close to Miss Cathy’s condo (which was a
good thing because we spent five hours, yes I said five hours in his office one day and after it was all over it was
all I could do to see straight to drive the mile (or less) home where we both
collapsed sitting around waiting after so many tests and disappointments when
it all added up to nothing as usual…and not knowing was getting to be pretty
exhausting.
I thought I was pretty well versed on all that Alz had to
offer (at least during Stage One) but now but it seemed the disease had us
chewing over something not on the menu.
It’d been about a month of ferrying mom from doctor to
doctor to doctor and my expectations were getting pretty bipolar; swinging from
manic high with optimism that the next physician would have answers (and better
yet a magic pill to solve everything) to depressed low when it turned out the doctor had just as many questions as I
did and the cycle would start all over again with the next doctor.
Miss Cathy alternated between a state of quiet panic at the
thought of what to do if she were going blind to raging against the doctors
whom she felt had let her down. I couldn’t imagine what she must have been
feeling, all of a sudden not being able to see and she couldn’t trust her mind
with the information it was giving her eyes with what was visible, it was truly
a strange circumstance compounded by the doctor’s inability to help.
So, after many doctor’s appointments and disappointments and
it was with low expectations and trepidation that we arrived at Dr GG’s well-appointed
office in an upscale part of town very near the urban center.
Update 6/8/13:Dr Brian Ragsdale PhD,a long time reader of the blog, sent the following after reading the post:
http://www.livestrong.com/article/106104-vision-problems-associated-alzheimers-disease/
Update 6/8/13:Dr Brian Ragsdale PhD,a long time reader of the blog, sent the following after reading the post:
http://www.livestrong.com/article/106104-vision-problems-associated-alzheimers-disease/
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