Kippy,
Great guestions. Having your AN extracanalicular, rather then intracanalicular, is probably not all that unusual. Mine was [and I love saying was
] in the same position. I agree with Tony that they probably can only tell so much from the MRI, as far as cranial nerve involvment with the AN. The facial [VII] nerve runs along with auditory and vestibular nerve through a portion of the auditory canal, so this may be why it can be affected more often than the other cranial nerves. In my case, the neurosurgeon thought that removing my AN would go quickly, but once into it, he found that the AN was more involved with and stuck on the facial nerve than he had predicted. After surgery I had some dry eye and slow blinking (both controled by the facial nerve) on the AN side for about 4 to 6 weeks. I think they predict potential nerve involvement from their knowledge of cranial nerve anatomy and where your AN shows up on the MRI, and their learned experiences treating ANs-- another reason to use a highly experienced team to treat your AN.
Doctors also use their experience and knowledge of tumors in general to help diagnose what type tumor they think you have. In the literature I've read, tumors in this region are 92% of the time acoustic neuroma (vestibular schwannoma) and about 8% of the time they're meninginoma. It's probably better to have an AN rather than meningioma. Meningioma, from what I've read, is more likely to affect the surrounding area.
Regards,
Rob