I had my titanium screw for my BAHA installed at the same time I had a translab. The abutment was not attached to the titanium screw at that time...the screw went in, he sewed me up, and 3 months later, he put the abutment on the titanium screw. The doc said he does it that way to prevent infection near the translab incision. Don't know if that is true or not, but the answer satisfied me. Three months later I still had to get the flap of skin scalped, had the hole punched, etc. and then the little plastic lid was snapped on. It was the normal type of skin healing. There was numbness, itching. No pain, but it was there, and I was aware of it. I looked at in the mirror several times every day.
Medical injuries make most of us jump to unfounded conclusions. It hurts right here...look it up on Google...I must have cancer, etc. Turns out you just played tennis for the first time in 20 years, and your stomach muscles never hurt like this before. No cancer, you're just not a kid anymore.
Well you just had a major surgery that can clearly confuse your brain for the rest of your life. I had my surgery almost 3 years ago, and I am still wonky 24/7. Other AN patients have very little wonky problems. Mine never stops but sometimes it gets to the point that I just have to sit down, and most of the time I am 95% functional. I know what does it to me. Rapid movement of my head really does me in.
My daughter just delivered a new grandson for me this weekend. While she was in the hospital, my wife and I watched our 14 month old grand daughter. Took her to the park one day, and PawPaw and Kinleigh went down the spiral slide abut 5 times. I got ultra vertigo big time. PawPaw just has to stay away from those slides. All that movement just confused my brain.
I am going to take a guess at what happened to you. You are still mildly wonky from your surgery and improving. You start looking at your BAHA site, using a mirror, and you are confusing your brain, and it increases your vertigo. I have found out that my eyes are the primary way I balance myself...that could be happening to you too. Looking into a mirror, that is reflected off another mirror could really confuse your brain. I don't think your BAHA had any direct cause for your wonky feeling. I do think it had an indirect cause...you looking at it with a mirror. As the kids say now "just saying..."
I might be wrong, but that is my guess and I'm sticking to it.
James
Hope you are feeling better.