Author Topic: My AN diagnosis and surgery  (Read 3380 times)

Autumnbird

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My AN diagnosis and surgery
« on: December 27, 2021, 12:20:10 am »
The posts on this forum have been so very helpful to me since my AN diagnosis; I wanted to share my own experience, with the hope that it would help someone. I am a 47 years old female. I have experienced hearing loss and tinnitus since late 2016 or early 2017; it progressively got worse. I had a hearing test done that showed poor hearing on the left side but I foolishly assumed it was nothing serious. In 2020, I started to experience feeling of pressure and fullness in my left ear, which was more annoying when I would lie down. I knew I should see an ENT but thought I’d wait until the Covid situation got better. In July 2021, I saw an ENT who shared that hearing loss on one side could be indicative of acoustic neuroma and ordered an MRI. He was rather blunt about suggesting that my hearing loss seemed permanent and that traditional hearing aids won’t work (speech discrimination was nil). I remember coming home and crying. Even though I suspected my doc was correct, I tried to push those thoughts out and continued to hope that it was something minor that could be fixed. The MRI showed a 1.5 cm AN on the left side. I was referred to Dr Marlan Hansen in University of Iowa. I was very anxious about my appointment in September. I remember being frozen with fear during the meeting. He suggested translab approach surgery considering that my hearing in the left ear was all but gone. He did not seem enthusiastic about saving hearing nerve (for cochlear implants) but said that his priority would be to save the facial nerve and that translab offered the best route for that. I was also told that the tumor was 2.5.cm from front to back—this was something I did not know from the note in the MRI report. The tumor was deemed “medium sized”.  Surgery was scheduled for November. The wait was excruciating and I was panicky and consumed with fear. The surgery date came at last. I had an 8 hour long surgery that went as expected. Woke up with horrible nausea that was uncontrollable for 24 hours but got better after that and went away in a 5 days. I was in ICU for a day. The pain in head and ear got bearable enough that I could mange with Tylenol a couple of days after surgery. I was discharged after 4 days. The doctors and nurses were amazing and I don’t have words to express my gratitude to Dr Hansen and his team at Iowa. It has now been 7 weeks since I had my  surgery. I have been taking it really easy at home. The fatigue was expected but what I did not expect was the metallic/burnt taste that has continued since my surgery. Reading about it in the discussion forums on this website has been very reassuring! I will see Dr Hansen in May to discuss options for SSD. I am not a candidate for cochlear implants since the nerve was removed during surgery but I think I will be considered for CROS or BAHA. Please feel free to message me if you have any questions. I wish everyone on this forum good health and positive outcomes!
47 yr female
Progressive hearing loss, tinnitus since 2017
AN diagnosis left ear September 2021
1.5 cm width x 2.5 cm length
Translab November 2021
@ Univ of Iowa (Dr Marlan Hansen)
SSD, facial nerve preserved
Recovery slow but steady

Greece Lover

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Re: My AN diagnosis and surgery
« Reply #1 on: December 29, 2021, 08:50:55 am »
Thanks for this update. Glad you’re doing well! I had the metallic taste too and it went away in a month or two.
Vestibular Schwannoma 1.2 cm. Right side.
Middle fossa surgery at University of Iowa on May 9 2016.
Hearing saved.  Face is fine. Balance pretty darn good most days.
One year follow up MRI showed no tumor. 
Five year follow up showed no tumor, so I'm in the clear.

Autumnbird

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Re: My AN diagnosis and surgery
« Reply #2 on: December 29, 2021, 04:10:29 pm »
Thanks, Greecelover!
47 yr female
Progressive hearing loss, tinnitus since 2017
AN diagnosis left ear September 2021
1.5 cm width x 2.5 cm length
Translab November 2021
@ Univ of Iowa (Dr Marlan Hansen)
SSD, facial nerve preserved
Recovery slow but steady

MariettaJoker

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Re: My AN diagnosis and surgery
« Reply #3 on: December 30, 2021, 09:11:28 am »
Autumnbird,

Our stories are somewhat similar. I'm a 60 year old male that first had hearing loss in my right ear at about age 55. I got a hearing aid in the one ear and the ENT never mentioned MRI. Fast forward to September 2021 (60 days after I retired from AT&T after 36 years) I suddenly had a big decline in my right ear hearing to the point I was deaf in that ear and I started getting some right side facial paralysis. At this point the doc ordered an MRI and we discovered I had a 1" tumor on the right side.

I had surgery on 11/30/21 (trans method), amazingly I had zero dizziness or nauseous feelings which is VERY atypical and I was home in 3 days and pretty much normal except for some significant right side facial paralysis, including my right eye. I've got surgery scheduled to add a weight to my eyelid and we'll give the face about 3 months to see if I have any improvement and then we'll look at facial surgery to correct what we can. The doctor at Emory Hospital in Atlanta where I had the surgery isn't too optimistic that I'll get much back naturally.

Other than the facial stuff my recovery has been amazing. I've walked 3-4 miles every day since the day after I arrived home and I was driving in 3 weeks. My scar is healing nicely and already concealed in large part by my hair. I have to say that my recovery has gone much better than I expected and I'm so grateful for that. Now I've got to figure out the face!

I did move forward with the Phonak CROS-P hearing aids and they are working VERY WELL for me. If you can swing the cost, I highly recommend these hearing aids for SS hearing loss.

For anyone facing this surgery, don't be too afraid, it's likely your dread is worse than the final outcome.....
"If we couldn't laugh, we would all go insane" - Jimmy Buffett
Vestibular Schwannoma 2.3 x 2.5 cm. Right side.
Surgical approach was translabyrinthine on 11/30/21 at Emory Hospital in Atlanta, GA.
Total right side hearing lost and facial paralysis on right side
Phonak Audeo CROS-P hearing aids

Autumnbird

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Re: My AN diagnosis and surgery
« Reply #4 on: January 02, 2022, 10:23:25 pm »
Thanks for sharing, MariettaJoker! It’s great that your recovery has been speedy! Hopefully, the facial issue will correct itself naturally and you won’t need the surgery. It’s really quite amazing that you can walk that much so soon after the surgery. After reading your account, I feel I haven’t pushed myself enough to move around. I will try more in the new year  :) Many good wishes to you for the New Year!
47 yr female
Progressive hearing loss, tinnitus since 2017
AN diagnosis left ear September 2021
1.5 cm width x 2.5 cm length
Translab November 2021
@ Univ of Iowa (Dr Marlan Hansen)
SSD, facial nerve preserved
Recovery slow but steady

donjehle

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Re: My AN diagnosis and surgery
« Reply #5 on: March 03, 2022, 05:36:55 pm »
It has been a couple of months since your latest post on this thread, Autumnbird.  I'm curious to know how your recovery is going now.  Are you moving more?  Are things more 'normal' now?  Did you do CROS or BAHA?

I'm eager to hear how things are going for you now.
Burning Tongue, Loss of Hearing & Balance, and Tinnitus led to MRI. Very small AN found on 11/23/2021
While watching and waiting, lost significant hearing. WRS now at 12% (down from 100%). Was fitted with CROS system on 3/7/22.  Stable MRI on 7/29/22
No treatment yet.