The statistics are interesting but they can be quite misleading, or as
Mark Twain wrote (in 1907):
Figures often beguile me, particularly when I have the duty of arranging of them myself; in which case the remark attributed to (Benjamin ) Disraeli* would often apply with justice and force: "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics."I have no scientific training and am not a doctor but I've long discounted externals - such as cell phones - as the cause of acoustic neuromas. I suspect they may be genetic but they are not passed on from generation to generation, which makes that explanation a bit problematic. They are definitely anomalous and as such, may not have a genetic base, such as ethnicity. I also doubt geographical location is the culprit. If it were, that would seem to verify external influences as the root cause of the mutation of the Schwann cells that form myelin, the base of acoustic neuromas.
I won't argue against theories and speculation as I have only more of the same to offer. I just don't see the
'Aha! moment' anywhere near. That acoustic neuromas are rare is evidenced, as
Nancy Drew noted, by the (unfortunate) lack of attention paid to them by the public. ANs receive little research money and less publicity. Like it or not folks, we're 'unique'.
Jim19th century British Prime Minister