In an elderly person, weight loss can have certain causes a doctor would never consider to be a problem in a younger person. For one, your elderly aunt may not be able to obtain nutritious food because she’s unable to make it out of the house to go shopping and there’s no one else around to do it for her. Poorly fitting dentures can make it uncomfortable for her to eat, or she may be experiencing increasing senility due to Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, or an underlying infection and has lost her appetite.

As with younger people, I consider weight loss in an elderly person to be serious if she loses more than 10% of her body weight over the course of a month or two. If this happens, I’ll order a blood test to determine if there is evidence of malnutrition. Lower serum protein levels, albumin levels, and lymphocyte counts ate all signs that the immune system is beginning to deteriorate, making an elderly person more prone to infections, bedsores, falls, and other health problems. These can depress the appetite even mote.

The treatment for your elderly relative will depend on the cause. Using Meals on Wheels, taking food supplements, and getting new dentures, as well as possibly going into a nursing home are some of the steps that might be considered by the doctor and the patient’s family.

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