So you think your lack of taste actually was one of the reasons you lost weight?
No doubt about it. When all foods - even your favorites - taste like cardboard (
or are completely tasteless) the desire to eat is drastically reduced, even when you're hungry, because eating is simply unrewarding. That's how important the sense of taste is. Because I practically stopped eating, my body used the stored fat I had built up (
mostly in my mid-section) to sustain itself. My stomach 'shrunk', my extra pounds disappeared and I was feeling more fatigued with every week that went by. I'm just shy of 5' 8" and when my weight dropped below 140 pounds (down from 170) I started to get concerned. My wife, even more so. I finally saw my PCP, her ordered an MRI (
looking for a 'sinus problem') and the rest is, as they say, is history. Thanks to my changed eating habits I've been able to maintain my weight at around 140, which is just about right for my height and build. I've done this for almost 5 years, now. I do a little light exercise but, as I've stated in a previous post, nothing strenuous. However, I hasten to add that I'm retired but far from sedentary. I still have responsibilities (
church deacon) so I'm up and out or working around the house (
condo) every day. I jokingly call my weight loss '
the AN diet". As this thread shows, every AN patient has a slightly different experience with weight gain or loss. This is mine. I hope it helps add to our collective understanding of the myriad ramifications of developing an acoustic neuroma and I thank you for starting the thread to explore the issue.
Jim