It’s sometimes frustrating to try to explain that the gene mutation in the family (PSEN1 in our case) means it’s a 100% chance you get it. Most people have never heard of it, so you get a lot of “well, maybe you’ll be lucky and it won’t affect you!” from well meaning people.
I’m very sorry for what you’re going through with your mom. My father in law had it and died a year ago at age 64 after 16 years of decline. Watching a truly brilliant person slowly lose their faculties and abilities until they don’t recognize their own family is awful.
Two of his kids have the mutation (not my wife, thankfully) and so we all hope that better treatments are available for them.
I’m very sorry for what you’re going through with your mom. My father in law had it and died a year ago at age 64 after 16 years of decline. Watching a truly brilliant person slowly lose their faculties and abilities until they don’t recognize their own family is awful.
Two of his kids have the mutation (not my wife, thankfully) and so we all hope that better treatments are available for them.