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Mental health changes are common alongside dementia—depression, anxiety, psychosis, sleep problems, and sometimes sudden delirium. Knowing what to watch for and how to respond can make home life safer and calmer.

MedPro USA Health Services
MedPro USA Health Services

Common Mental Health Conditions with Dementia

  • Depression: withdrawal, tearfulness, appetite or sleep changes

  • Anxiety: worry, pacing, reassurance-seeking

  • Psychosis: hallucinations or delusions (more common with Lewy body/Parkinson’s dementia)

  • Agitation/Apathy: less initiative or increased restlessness

  • Sleep disorders: fragmented sleep, REM behavior disorder

  • Delirium (medical emergency pattern): sudden confusion from infection, dehydration, constipation, low oxygen, or new meds

First, Rule Out Delirium & Medical Triggers

  • Check for fever/UTI, dehydration, pain, constipation, or new/changed meds.

  • Consider environmental triggers: hunger/thirst, noise/clutter, too many visitors, low light/shadows (sundowning), embarrassment during bathing.

  • Caregiver-assisted screens: Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia and NPI-Q can guide a conversation with the clinician.

Home Strategies that Work (Non-Drug First)

  • Predictable rhythm: morning daylight + gentle movement; quiet evening “buffer.”

  • Communication: validate → one short step → two choices → purposeful redirect (fold towels, water plants, photo reminiscence).

  • Sleep supports: consistent bedtime, limit naps (<40 min), consider melatonin with clinician guidance; avoid diphenhydramine/“PM” products.

  • Comfort & pain: supportive seating, pressure relief; ask your clinician about scheduled acetaminophen if appropriate.

When Medications Are Considered (Clinician-Directed)

  • Depression/anxiety: SSRIs are common; avoid anticholinergic TCAs. Try to avoid benzodiazepines (falls/confusion).

  • Psychosis: only if dangerous or severely distressing after non-drug steps. Antipsychotics carry a black-box warning in dementia; dose low/short-term and avoid haloperidol in Lewy body/Parkinson’s due to sensitivity.

  • Sleep: melatonin may help; avoid Z-drugs and benzodiazepines when possible.

Red FlagsCall the Care Team

  • Sudden change in awareness/behavior (possible delirium)

  • Persistent low mood with thoughts of self-harm

  • Dangerous or highly distressing hallucinations/delusions

  • Rapid sleep collapse, weight loss, refusal to eat/drink, repeated falls

  • Caregiver exhaustion or safety concerns

How MedPro USA Helps at Home (Memorial & Greater Houston)

  • At-home assessment (RN/therapist): check pain, infection, constipation, meds; map behaviors; tune the environment.

  • Care plan & coaching: de-escalation scripts, sundowning routine, purposeful daily activities, safe transfers.

  • Coordination with your physician: med review, monitoring, and follow-up.

  • Caregivers (private pay): companionship, ADL support, calming routines, evening/overnight coverage.

Memorial & Greater Houston • 📞713-932-0017 ✉️Info@MPUHealthServices.com
🏠Address: 9219 Katy Freeway, Suite 207, Houston, TX 77024  🌐Web: mpuhealthservices.com

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