The clock strikes 5 p.m. and your mother — calm and lucid all morning — suddenly cannot recognize her own kitchen. She paces, asks where her late husband is, and accuses you of hiding her purse. By midnight she is exhausted, and so are you. If this scene feels familiar, you are not alone, and you are not failing.
This pattern has a name: sundowning. As a trusted provider of senior care in Fort Worth, Bluebonnet Caregivers has helped hundreds of Tarrant County families recognize, manage, and live through the late-day symptoms of dementia. Sundowning in dementia patients is one of the most distressing behaviors loved ones face — and one of the most misunderstood.
Sundowning, sometimes called late-day confusion, refers to a cluster of symptoms that worsen in the late afternoon and continue into the night. Common signs of sundowning in dementia patients include increased confusion, restlessness, pacing, suspicion, irritability, mood swings, and even hallucinations. The Alzheimer’s Association estimates that as many as 1 in 5 people with Alzheimer’s disease experience some form of sundowning, and the behavior often appears in the middle and later stages of the disease.
Sundowning is not a disease itself. It is a pattern — and once families learn to anticipate it, they can plan around it.
Researchers do not have one clean answer, but several factors appear to combine. The brain’s internal clock, the suprachiasmatic nucleus, is damaged by Alzheimer’s and other dementias, which disrupts the natural sleep-wake cycle. Add fatigue from a long day, fading natural light, hunger, low blood sugar, unmet bathroom needs, and an overstimulated nervous system, and a quiet afternoon can tip into chaos within minutes. Sundowning in dementia patients is often the brain’s way of saying it can no longer process what is happening around it.
In our work with Fort Worth families, we see the same triggers again and again: shift changes (a caregiver leaving for the day), too much background noise from a TV, dim or shadowy rooms, caffeine in the afternoon, skipped meals, painful joints, and unfamiliar visitors. Even something as small as a different dinner plate can unsettle a person whose memory is failing. Tracking triggers in a simple notebook for two weeks is one of the most useful things a family can do.
When sundowning hits, arguing or correcting almost always makes things worse. Instead, slow down. Lower your voice. Use short sentences. Sit at eye level. Validate the emotion behind the words: “You sound worried — I’m right here.” Offer a familiar comfort like a warm blanket, a favorite song, a sip of water, or a slow walk down the hall. Remove the audience — fewer people in the room means less stimulation. If the person fixates on going home, redirect rather than reason: “Let’s have a snack first, then we’ll figure it out.”
Prevention starts at sunrise. The Alzheimer’s Association and the National Institute on Aging both recommend a predictable daily structure: wake at the same time, get morning sunlight, plan demanding activities (bathing, doctor visits, errands) before noon, serve a light early dinner, and dim screens after sunset. Limit caffeine after lunch and avoid alcohol entirely. Turn on lamps before the sun goes down so shadows do not appear suddenly. A short afternoon rest can help — but long naps after 3 p.m. usually backfire.
Many families manage sundowning on their own for months or years. But there are signs it is time for help: the family caregiver is not sleeping, the loved one is wandering at night, falls are happening after dark, or weekday evenings have become a source of dread. Professional home care services — including companion care, personal care, respite care, and 24-hour care — can cover the difficult evening hours, give family caregivers real rest, and keep the person with dementia safer in the home they know best. Even a few evenings a week of trained support can change the rhythm of an entire household.
A thoughtful care plan for sundowning in dementia patients addresses the trigger windows directly. At Bluebonnet Caregivers, that often looks like a caregiver arriving around 3 p.m. to handle dinner, a calming activity, light housekeeping, medication reminders, and a structured bedtime routine — then either heading home at bedtime or staying overnight if wandering is a real risk. Family members get their evenings back, and the person with dementia gets consistent, gentle support during the hardest part of the day.
Call Bluebonnet Caregivers at (817) 231-0870 or visit bluebonnethomecare.com to schedule a free in-home assessment.
Sources: Alzheimer’s Association, “Sleep Issues and Sundowning” (alz.org); National Institute on Aging, “Tips for Coping with Sundowning” (nia.nih.gov).
Written by the Bluebonnet Caregivers Team | Locally owned, non-medical home care in Fort Worth, TX and Tarrant County. Call (817) 231-0870 or visit bluebonnethomecare.com.
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