Hi Deb:
Just a few days of mis-diagnosis. As a generally healthy fellow all of my life, I tended to avoid visiting doctor's offices unless I was
really sick or injured - bleeding profusely would be one of the few reasons I might seek a doctors help. That being my attitude, I also ignored most of my AN symptoms for quite awhile (who knew?)
Early last May (2006), I finally saw my PCP for rapid, unintended weight loss (35 pounds in six months - due mostly to a diminished appetite stemming from a loss of taste) as well as long-term one-sided hearing loss (that I foolishly self-diagnosed as being attributable to aging, listening to loud music, etc) and some occasional 'stabbing' pain on the left side of my head along with steadily-worsening dysequilibrium. The Good Doctor at first thought I might have a 'thyroid problem'. O.K. So, wanting an answer for my symptoms, I immediately went for the obligatory blood test. It came back negative for thyroid malfunction of any kind. I was not encouraged. My ever-diligent doctor (a good guy, really) then surmised I might have a 'sinus problem' that was affecting my taste. On that basis, he sent me for an MRI with contrast and...
Bingo! The answer to the cause of all my symptoms came 3 days later in the form of an MRI report and films that detailed a 4.5cm Acoustic Neuroma tumor on the left - deaf - side of my skull. It was very visible - even to me - on the MRI film. My doctor called me, at home, from
his home, the evening the MRI report was faxed to him and gave me the unsettling news. Of everything he said to me during that brief conversation, I really only heard four words:
'brain tumor',
'benign' and
'operable'. I grudgingly faced the harsh reality of the first two words - but I gratefully focused on the last two.
Never one to suffer unnecessarily when a fix was in sight, I was fortunate to quickly find a very competent and experienced neurosurgeon who was almost as eager to remove the tumor as I was to have it gone. I was undergoing
retrosigmoid approach AN-removal surgery at his hand, within a month. That was followed by fractionalized radiation treatments (26) to kill any remaining tumor cells and thus, prevent a re-growth. I'm good now - but it could have been a lot worse. Fortunately, my Primary Care Physician had no hesitation about ordering an MRI scan, even if his rationale for the MRI - the possiblity of a sinus condition - was mistaken. It all worked out.
I don't consider it a
real 'mis-diagnosis', but had I
not had that MRI, I could have went much longer without a physician recognizing and addressing the problem (AN) and had some very severe complications from the growing tumor, which was already huge (by most standards), beginning to press on my brainstem and making me unnaturally lethargic, which, along with the also-unnatural rapid weight loss, alarmed my loving wife, who, out of concern, made the initial doctor appointment for me and accompanied me to that, and every other doctor visit I have had, since. During and following my surgery, she stayed in the hospital for almost 3 full days, sleeping in the nurses lounge, while I was in ICU, just so she could be near me. I believe that I have been blessed in
many ways.
Jim