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Beekeeper Doug showed signs of dementia, but discovered it was a more treatable condition thanks to The Walton Centre

2 years ago

Beekeeper Doug showed signs of dementia, but discovered it was a more treatable condition thanks to The Walton Centre

For 80-year-old Doug Jones from Heswall, it was looking like he had Dementia.

He was forgetful, acting out of character and sleeping more than usual. But thanks to a specialist, multi-disciplinary clinic at The Walton Centre, it was discovered that Doug had Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus (NPH) ā€“ a completely treatable condition.

NPH is an often unrecognised and misunderstood condition that mostly affects people over the age of 60. It can sometimes develop after an injury, which is potentially the case with Doug when he fell backwards off a step ladder in November 2018. However, in most cases of NPH the cause is unknown.

The Walton Centre

Doug teaching others about keeping bees

The condition involves an abnormal build-up of cerebrospinal fluid in the brainā€™s ventricles, which puts pressure on the brain causing dementia-like symptoms, walking deterioration and incontinence. When identified, NPH can usually be solved by inserting a ventriculoperitoneal shunt in the brain, to drain away the excess fluid.

Doug was fitted with a shunt in at the beginning of 2021 and has so far experienced a steady improvement, but still has short term memory issues and fatigue.

Doug said:

ā€œIt was a weird time. I didnā€™t feel like I was declining, but looking back now I can see that I wasnā€™t myself. Iā€™m just glad that the clinicians at The Walton Centre were able to identify it was NPH, otherwise it wouldā€™ve been a very different outcome for me.

Consultant Neurosurgeon Catherine McMahon runs the NPH clinic, she said:

ā€œNPH is largely unrecognised and easy to misdiagnose as dementia. When patients come to us and we suspect itā€™s this condition thereā€™s a straightforward test which our Advanced Nurse Specialists do.

NHS Walton Centre

One key symptom is shuffling your feet when you walk, so the team and I draw off a small quantity of spinal fluid, wait, and then ask the patient to walk again. If we notice the shuffle has diminished or gone, that can tell us that itā€™s NPH and that they may need a shunt fitted to drain away the excess fluid into the abdominal cavity. We can fit innovative shunt valves which are programmable on future visits if the flow rate needs adjusting.

ā€œThe clinic we run here at The Walton Centre is a ā€˜one-stop-shopā€™ for NPH, patients will see everyone they need to in their appointment, get the tests they need and be booked in for further treatment if appropriate.ā€

The Walton Centre

Dougā€™s wife Elaine said:

ā€œItā€™s been a slow journey, but after he had the shunt fitted Doug has progressed well. Shortly after the shunt was fitted, Doug regained his mobility and more of his independence. Heā€™s an avid beekeeper and he was neglecting them when he had NPH, now heā€™s back at it and teaching others about keeping them, just like before. The team at The Walton Centre have given him a new lease of life and Iā€™m so thankful.ā€

For more information about NPH and the clinic here at The Walton Centre, click here.

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