Phyl,
My radiosurgeon has published some long term results of FSR with regards to hearing preservation (after 5 to 7 years from treatment). The data shows that about 80% of patients maintain or even improve their hearing they had before the treatment. The rest of course is additional hearing loss.
On the other hand there is a very intersting article called " Annual rate of hearing loss falls after fractionated stereotactic irradiation for vestibular schwannoma" , Touru Sakamoto, Hiroki Shirat, Norihito Takeichi and others. (I'm quoting the name of the article and authors in case you have access to these type of things , or if you're interested I could mail it to you. The purpose of the work was to investigate the rate of hearing loss in a population before and after irradiation to determine the effect of irradiation on hearing impairment. The conclusion of their research was (very summarized) that the mean annual rate of hearing loss was higher before irradiation, and hearing loss slowed rather than accelerated after irradiation. Although hearing loss after the treatment was usually permanent, FSR was suggested to be effective to lower the rate of hearing loss. The hearing loss speed data was as follows: pre FSR: about 19 dB/year average, first year after treatment 11 dB/year and after the 3rd year the hearing loss approaches to 0 db/year (stops) (THis is for pure tone tests). This basically is in alignment with what was reported in this thread on hearing stabilization . The research was done for tumors size ranging between 3 mm to 29 mm. It's also noted that the hearing loss after FSR during the first couple of years is mainly due to the fact that the tumor doesn't shrink fast enough to produce pressure relief on the nerve and thus stopping the hearing loss since three years is too long for the nerve to heal after compression.
Even with my almost 3 cm AN my hearing was pretty stable and quite good before treatment so I was wondering what would happen only due to the effect of the radiation itself.
Regards
Pablo