She was told she was pre-diabetic a few years back, but there seems to have been a lack of followup which meant that it developed into type 2 without anyone noticing. It is only because my Mum had a hospital stay back in May, initially to try and find out why her left leg was not working, and they started regular blood tests that they confirmed type 2 and started her on Insulin. She was seen by a stroke doctor as that was the initial thought. She had had a couple of falls, and can't get up on her own, and then was starting to find it difficult to walk as her left leg would not flex at the ankle or bend much at the knee, so she had to drag the leg. She came out after 3 weeks only to have picked up sepsis and was rushed back in after a few days at home. The hospital focused on the sepsis this time, and made little effort IMO to investigate her decreasing mobility, even the rare physio visits (she was in nearly 4 weeks this second time).
Now she is home, I have to manually lift her onto a commode, she sleeps in her chair, and this has all happened rather suddenly! Roughly since April/May. As I say though, I think the type 2 developed years ago, but remained untreated until now, so too late to repair the nerve damage in her legs?
She has had a nerve conduction study, and the stroke consultant we saw yesterday talked us through the results, although with the caveat of it not being his area of expertise. Very poor to non-existent readings in both legs, with the left being the worse.
I am her sole carer, and other family are over 200 miles away. We currently have a council provided care package for a few weeks aimed at easing someone back into home from a lengthy hospital stay. Once they finish, we would then have to pay for any care package going forward, due to my Mums financial position.
We have recently placed an order for an electric bed (before we got the diagnosis), thinking that with a small improvement in her mobility she could make use of it. Now that seems very unlikely without some sort of hoist.
Although there is the possibility that it is something else, and perhaps we should ask for a second opinion, if it is neuropathology then I am looking at what practical steps I can take to improve our lives going forward, and we can afford reasonable bits of equipment, adaptation if they provide an improvement.
Thanks
Richard