Hi,
Tracy - and a slightly belated welcome to the ANA website/discussion forums.
Your shock at the AN diagnosis and the 'unreal' feeling as you prepare for surgery (including all the pre-op testing involved) are almost exactly what I experienced 4 years ago. As a healthy older guy who shunned doctors and hospitals most of my life, receiving the AN diagnosis (via a 7 P.M. phone call from my doctor) was upsetting and began a few intense weeks of doctor and lab visits, calls to my medical insurer and a lot of reading about 'acoustic neuroma' on the internet. Fortunately, like you, I discovered this website early on and it has remained a source of information and comfort to me, even though I experienced an excellent surgical outcome and successful (
but uneventful) radiation treatment a few months later (in a planned sequence of treatments). You're naming of the AN is inventive and has been done by a few other of our posters. I think it's a very good way to deal with the situation. As
Clarice (
'CHD63') stated, a sense of humor is a valuable aid to getting through this often stressful experience.
To respond to your questions (as best I can):
When the doctor considers it necessary (due to a risk of CSF drainage) a shunt will be installed prior to surgery.
Facial palsy
is a stated risk with AN surgery but the risk is relatively low and when facial paralysis occurs, it is often temporary. I had no post-op facial paralysis - and I'm not an exception, but I do have a small (dime-size) 'numb' spot on one side of my tongue that never resolved. However, my taste is normal (better than before the AN surgery) and this 'spot' has no real impact on my daily life.
The 'average' recovery time is usually stated as '6 weeks'. However, that is a 'ball park' figure. You should only be dependent on others for a week or two and back to work in six weeks, possibly less, depending on how you do post-op. It's difficult to put a solid number on recovery time, as much as we would like to. There are too many variables involved. Figure six weeks and keep your schedule open to more, if necessary, especially at work. I was driving again - with my doctors permission - barely 2 weeks post-surgery and although I was recently retired, I was able to resume most of my usual activities within four weeks of my hospital discharge. I live a relatively active life, am a Deacon in my church and generally have a full plate, as it were. I trust you'll have a similar surgical outcome. Your surgery date is only 3 weeks away and I believe the sooner you get this over with, the better. That was my attitude and my surgery was within 3 weeks of my diagnosis, based on my neurosurgeon's urgency to
'get that thing out of there'. I agreed - and we did. I'm fine, now. You will be too.
Jim