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Dive into the research topics where Audrey Depelteau is active.

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Featured researches published by Audrey Depelteau.


Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine | 2018

Insomnia and Mild Cognitive Impairment

Ronald C. Hamdy; Amber E. Kinser; K. Dickerson; Tracey Kendall-Wilson; Audrey Depelteau; Rebecca Copeland; Kathleen Whalen

Insomnia is a common problem in older people, especially in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) whose circadian rhythm is often compromised. Insomnia exerts such a toll on caregivers that it is frequently the primary reason for seeking to institutionalize their loved ones. Three different types of insomnia are recognized: sleep-onset or initial insomnia, sleep maintenance or middle insomnia, and early morning awakening or late insomnia. Nocturnal hypoglycemia, as a cause of middle insomnia, is the main focus of this case study. Other types of insomnia are also briefly reviewed. The management of insomnia is then discussed including sleep hygiene, the usefulness and potential drawbacks of dietary supplements, nonprescription over-the-counter preparations and prescription hypnotics. Sleep architecture is then briefly reviewed, emphasizing the importance of its integrity and the role of each sleep stage.


Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine | 2018

Visual Hallucinations and Paranoid Delusions

Ronald C. Hamdy; Amber E. Kinser; Tracey Kendall-Wilson; Audrey Depelteau; Rebecca Copeland; Kathleen Whalen; J. Culp

Visual well-formed hallucinations, fluctuations in the level of cognition, and alertness and extrapyramidal signs are core features of dementia with Lewy bodies. Some patients realize that what they are seeing or hearing are just hallucinations and learn to accept them. Others, however experience these hallucinations as quite real and cannot be dissuaded from the firm belief that they are. In fact, efforts to dissuade them often serve only to confirm the often associated paranoid delusions and this may lead to a catastrophic ending. Hence, it is best not to contradict the patient. Instead, attempts should be made to distract the patient and change the focus of her or his attention. In this case scenario, we present a 68-year-old man who has been diagnosed with dementia with Lewy bodies. He lives with his daughter. He has visual hallucinations and paranoid delusions that worsen at night: He thinks there are people outside the house plotting to kill him. We discuss what went wrong in the patient/caregiver interaction and how the catastrophic ending could have been avoided or averted.


Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine | 2018

Repetitive Questioning Exasperates Caregivers

Ronald C. Hamdy; J. V. Lewis; Rebecca Copeland; Audrey Depelteau; Amber E. Kinser; Tracey Kendall-Wilson; Kathleen Whalen

Repetitive questioning is due to an impaired episodic memory and is a frequent, often presenting, problem in patients with Alzheimer’s disease (amnestic type). It is due to the patients’ difficulties learning new information, retaining it, and recalling it, and is often aggravated by a poor attention span and easy distractibility. A number of factors may trigger and maintain repetitive questioning. Caregivers should try to identify and address these triggers. In the case discussion presented, it is due to the patient’s concerns about her and her family’s safety triggered by watching a particularly violent movie aired on TV. What went wrong in the patient/caregiver interaction and how it could have been avoided or averted are explored. Also reviewed are the impact of repetitive questioning, the challenges it raises for caregivers, and some effective intervention strategies that may be useful to diffuse the angst that caregivers experience with repetitive questioning.


Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine | 2018

Repetitive Questioning II

Ronald C. Hamdy; Amber E. Kinser; Audrey Depelteau; J. V. Lewis; Rebecca Copeland; Tracey Kendall-Wilson; Kathleen Whalen

Repetitive questioning is a major problem for caregivers, particularly taxing if they are unable to recognize and understand the reasons why their loved one keeps asking the same question over and over again. Caregivers may be tempted to believe that the patient does not even try to remember the answer given or is just getting obnoxious. This is incorrect. Repetitive questioning is due to the underlying disease: The patient’s short term memory is impaired and he is unable to register, encode, retain and retrieve the answer. If he is concerned about a particular topic, he will keep asking the same question over and over again. To the patient each time she asks the question, it is as if she asked it for the first time. Just answering repetitive questioning by providing repeatedly the same answer is not sufficient. Caregivers should try to identify the underlying cause for this repetitive questioning. In an earlier case study, the patient was concerned about her and her family’s safety and kept asking whether the doors are locked. In this present case study, the patient does not know how to handle the awkward situation he finds himself in. He just does not know what to do. He is not able to adjust to the new unexpected situation. So he repeatedly wants to reassure himself that he is not intruding by asking the same question over and over again. We discuss how the patient’s son-in-law could have avoided this situation and averted the catastrophic ending.


Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine | 2018

Agnosia Interferes With Daily Hygiene in Patients With Dementia

Ronald C. Hamdy; Amber E. Kinser; Jennifer E. Culp; Tracey Kendall-Wilson; Audrey Depelteau; Rebecca Copeland; Kathleen Whalen

Patients with dementia, particularly Alzheimer’s disease, may not recognize that their clothes are dirty. They may see the food stains and discoloration of the clothes and yet because of their agnosia are unable to integrate these observations and deduce that their clothes are dirty and need to be changed. They will, therefore, resist attempts to get them to change clothes, especially if these clothes happen to be their favorite ones. This often causes caregivers to become frustrated, especially, if it represents a change in the patient’s previous habits of only wearing clean clothes. In this case study, we present a 72-year-old woman with moderate Alzheimer’s disease who lives with her daughter, who adamantly refuses to change the clothes she has been wearing for a few days and which are now clearly dirty. We report the interaction, highlight what went wrong in the patient–daughter interaction, and discuss how the catastrophic ending could have been avoided or averted.


Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine | 2018

Driving and Patients With Dementia

Ronald C. Hamdy; Amber E. Kinser; Tracey Kendall-Wilson; Audrey Depelteau; Kathleen Whalen; J. Culp

Driving is a symbol of autonomy and independence, eagerly awaited during adolescence, cherished during adulthood and reluctantly rescinded during old age. It is nevertheless an individual’s privilege, not right, especially as driving may affect other drivers and pedestrians on the road. It is therefore not only the individual patient who is at stake but essentially the entire community. In this case scenario, we describe the situation that arose when a patient with multi-infarct dementia wanted to go for a drive and his son and grandson tried to convince him that he could no longer drive. What went wrong in the caregivers/patient interaction is presented. The futility of arguing with patients who have dementia is highlighted as well as the suspiciousness it may generate. Alternate actions that can be useful to avoid/avert the situation from escalating and having a catastrophic ending are discussed. Testing/evaluating patients with dementia for fitness to drive is also reviewed and a list of select resources is included.


Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine | 2018

Impulsive, Disinhibited Behavior—Dining in a Restaurant:

Ronald C. Hamdy; Amber E. Kinser; Tracey Kendall-Wilson; Audrey Depelteau; Kathleen Whalen

Dining in a restaurant with a loved one who has dementia can be an ordeal, especially if the expectations of the caregiver do not match those of the patient and the restaurant environment is not suitable for patients with dementia. The size of the dining area, lighting, background music or noise, décor of the room, number of customers, variety of the items on the menu, number of plates and cutlery on the table, in addition to flowers, candles, and other decorations on the table are all potent distractors. There are so many stimuli; the patient can be overwhelmed with information overload and not able to focus on the main purpose of the event: have dinner and especially enjoy the other person’s company. In this case scenario, we present a 62-year-old man diagnosed with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). His daughter “invited” him to have dinner with her at a very fancy restaurant to celebrate her promotion at work. Unfortunately, whereas the evening started very well, it had a catastrophic ending. We discuss what went wrong in the patient/daughter interaction and how the catastrophic ending could have been avoided or averted.


Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine | 2018

Fronto-Temporal Dementia, Diabetes Mellitus and Excessive Eating:

Ronald C. Hamdy; Amber E. Kinser; Kara Dickerson; Tracey Kendall-Wilson; Audrey Depelteau; Kathleen Whalen

Diabetes mellitus is common among older people. Hypoglycemia is a sign of poorly controlled diabetes mellitus and may lead to irritability, agitation, anxiety, hunger, and an excessive food intake, which in turn may make the control of diabetes more difficult. Excessive, inappropriate food intake is also a sign of Fronto-Temporal Dementia (behavioral variant: bvFTD). In this case study, we describe the events leading to an altercation that developed between an older diabetic patient with bvFTD and the staff in an Assisted Living Facility. His first dose of insulin was given early that morning while he was still asleep. He, subsequently, woke up feeling hungry, agitated, and irritable. This, in turn, exacerbated the hyperorality associated with bvFTD. We examine what went wrong in the patient/caregiver interaction and how this potentially catastrophic situation could have been avoided or defused.


Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine | 2017

Patients With Dementia Are Easy Victims to Predators

Ronald C. Hamdy; J. V. Lewis; Rebecca Copeland; Audrey Depelteau; Amber E. Kinser; Tracey Kendall-Wilson; Kathleen Whalen

Patients with dementia, especially Alzheimer’s disease and particularly those in early stages, are susceptible to become victims of predators: Their agnosia (see Case 1) prevents them from detecting and accurately interpreting subtle signals that otherwise would have alerted them that they are about to fall for a scam. Furthermore, their judgment is impaired very early in the disease process, often before other symptoms manifest themselves and usually before a diagnosis is made. Patients with early stages of dementia are therefore prime targets for unscrupulous predators, and it behooves caregivers and health care professionals to ensure the integrity of these patients. In this case study, we discuss how a man with mild Alzheimer’s disease was about to fall for a scam were it not for his vigilant wife. We discuss what went wrong in the patient/caregiver interaction and how the catastrophic ending could have been avoided or averted.


Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine | 2017

Patients with Dementia Are Easily Distracted

Ronald C. Hamdy; Amber E. Kinser; Audrey Depelteau; Tracey Kendall-Wilson; J. V. Lewis; Kathleen Whalen

Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is the middle ground between normal, age-appropriate memory impairment, and dementia. Whereas patients with MCI are able to cope with the memory deficit, those with dementia are not: Their memory impairment and other cognitive deficits are of sufficient magnitude to interfere with the patients’ ability to cope independently with daily activities. In both MCI and dementia, there is evidence of declining cognitive functions from a previously higher level of functioning. In both the conditions, there is also an evidence of dysfunction in one or more cognitive domains. There are two subtypes of MCI depending on whether memory is predominantly affected: amnestic type and nonamnestic/behavioral type. Not all patients with MCI transition to dementia, some recover. In this case scenario, we present a 68-year-old man with MCI who lives with his wife. They are getting ready to host dinner. His wife asks him to vacuum the dining room while she runs an urgent errand. We describe how this simple task vacuuming a room ended in a catastrophe with the patient spending the night in jail and his wife hospitalized. We discuss what went wrong in the patient/wife interaction and how the catastrophic ending could have been avoided. Objectives At the end of this case discussion readers will know the following: The differences between mild cognitive impairment (MCI), normal aging, and dementia. MCI is often a precursor of dementia and has an amnestic or nonamnestic/behavioral presentation. However, not all patients with MCI develop dementia, some even recover. MCI is an opportunity to discuss with the patient various issues that may arise, should it progress to dementia such as preparing a will, transitioning from driver to passenger, and addressing various financial and legal issues including end-of-life issues and selecting someone to have power of attorney. Patients with MCI should be regularly followed up to determine whether and when they will transition to dementia as this changes the level of care needed. Patients with MCI are at an increased risk of triggering accidents because of their cognitive impairment and often impaired judgment. It may be hazardous to leave patients with MCI alone, without supervision. The importance of support groups, social media, and cameras when providing care to patients with MCI and dementias.

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Amber E. Kinser

East Tennessee State University

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Kathleen Whalen

East Tennessee State University

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Ronald C. Hamdy

East Tennessee State University

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Tracey Kendall-Wilson

East Tennessee State University

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Rebecca Copeland

East Tennessee State University

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J. V. Lewis

East Tennessee State University

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J. Culp

East Tennessee State University

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Jennifer E. Culp

East Tennessee State University

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K. Dickerson

East Tennessee State University

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Kara Dickerson

East Tennessee State University

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