Hrissy -
not a silly question at all. I have a BAHA - surgery in March 2008/processor in June 2008 - and I still don't understand the whole concept or why I need one except for the fact that I am SSD.
I'm an accountant - don't understand a lot of technical medical stuff - so I'm oblivious to whether my hearing nerve was cut or not. All I know is that the BAHA works (very well, in fact) for me
I do know that you have to be completely deaf in one ear (unilaterally deaf) in order for the BAHA implant to work. BAHA implants also work for those who are bilaterally deaf (deaf in both ears), but then they aren't called BAHA implants, they are called Cochlear implants.
The bottomline (one of my favorite accounting terms) - if you are SSD, or will be after your surgery, you will be a BAHA candidate.
The BAHA surgery can be combined with the AN surgery - like Julie's case - or it can be done in a separate surgery - like mine. Some docs like to combine the surgeries; some don't. I don't really know their reasoning, but I'm guessing it's a personal choice on their part.
If you do decide on the BAHA and your doc doesn't want to combine the surgeries, don't worry. The BAHA implant surgery is a simple surgery usually done on an outpatient basis and it's often done with just local anesthetic (they just numb your head by injecting the anesthesia). I had local anesthesia and had no issues at all.
If you have other BAHA questions, feel free to ask or check out some of the others posts about BAHAs under this section (Hearing Issues).
Jan