If you read the House Ear Clinic's opinions, you'll discover that radiation is unstudied, experimental technology with a low sucess rate and a high probability of serious after-effects.
House does not practice radiosurgery, and the misinformation they provide in regards to it is just that. Radiaton has been used to treat tumors for a very long time, and it is far from unstudied and experimental. Quite the contrary, it has a very high success rate, above 95%, and a low probability of serious after-effects. There are many peer reviewed, published medical studies that you can refer to in the radiosurgery section of this board.
If you read the opinions of a radiation facility such as Johns Hopkins they'll gloss over all of the side effects in one sentence and say that radiation almost always works fine. I would assume that these institutions are both top-notch in this field, so how am I supposed to decide on a procedure when "experts" are telling me two completely different things?
Again, House is not "expert" in radiation, and all the claims they make on their site are deliberately misleading. There was a discussion on this board, here's a link:
http://anausa.org/forum/index.php?topic=342.0 ÂÂ
John Hopkins performs both surgery and radiosurgery, as do many other maor academic facilities and they all use both. Why do you say John Hopkins is "glossing over" the side effects?
I am 29 years old, so I'm looking for a long-term solution that will leave as much of my hearing, facal function, etc., intact as possible. My first symptom of the AN was dizziness and my hearing seems to be fine for now. I would be very grateful for any help/advice that anyone can offer. Thank you.
Here's a link to a long-term study and some other info I recently posted:
http://www.neurosurgery.pitt.edu/imageguided/papers/acoustic.htmlThe House doctors are very good surgeons, not the only good ones, but they are very skilled. However, they are not a good source of information about radiosurgery for many reasons. First and foremost radiosurgery competes for their business, it is in their interest financially that patients be deterred from radiosurgery. Also, radiation is not their area of expertise, it's not even in their field. However the several facilities that perform both, will usually recommend radiosurgery unless the tumor is too large. Both optons are equally viable, it's just a matter of what you prefer personally. I'm sure you'll make the best decision for yourself, just make sure you are weighing accurate information when you do so.
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