Hi Kat,
I am a UPMC GK alumni, 16 months post op. my tumor is about the same size as yours. My tumor swelled at between 4 months and 6 months not as much as yours, I think it was 5mm x 8mm and swelled to 7mm x 10mm. I have it written down somewhere but couldn't find it quickly so it is close anyway. I was miserable with balance, head aches, tinnitus, hearing loss etc. I had to learn to deal with all the mess and began working on vestibular rehab. got a hearing aide, but the good news is at 13 months out I began to notice things calming down. I am now back to doing things I thought were over. I am even anticipating a return to the ski slopes this winter. I needed to work through the swelling and now the necrosis is beginning, I go for my next 6 month MRI at UPMC in Feb. and expect to see tumor shrinkage. I chose to do my follow up MRI's at UPMC so I would get immediate feed back and not the run around from one provider to the other. Saving the gas money seemed to be a mute point when it came to complicating the process by one facility competing with the next.
You have had your surgery at the right place, it would be a mistake to side step the care you are receiving at UPMC. Make your concerns known to Dr. Lundsford and his expert staff before you allow anyone to talk you into something that would interfere with that. The staff at UPMC have your best interest at the center of their care plan. If you need to have a change to your plan they will certainly direct you to some of the best AN surgeons in the country. I am always skeptical of those who use high pressure tactics no matter if it is selling a car or scaring me into an irreversible commitment especially financial or healthcare.
The scariest after effect I experienced was vertigo, my last attack was at the beginning of July. I have not experienced anything since. It took me a month to get my balance back and now at 16 months I still have severe tinnitus and hearing loss, but I consider them an inconvenience more than a problem. I have noticed (not tested yet) that I am hearing things I couldn't just a month ago in the AN ear. Not enough to say it has come back but it is making me feel I am improving. I have regained my confidence and most of my energy level I just have to get moving and restart an exercise plan to regain the strength I left on the sofa this past year.
My ENT at UPMC is Dr. Hirsch he lead my Gamma Knife team and is in charge of my post op care. He calls me the poster child for GK because my tumor is behaving as it is expected to. So I don't profess to hold the golden scepter of knowledge and as I said everyone reacts differently. I am personally convinced that UPMC has been my best decision in this whole process.
As tumors go ours is small, I understand that size is only one factor, location also has an impact on the symptoms we experience. Which nerve is effected and where on the nerve is the tumor attached. No two people are going to experience the same symptoms. But what I do know is that the swelling you have experienced is note worthy and I would personally want to here what Dr. Lundsford had to say before making any more decisions. I have posted numerous times over several categories on this forum, and in response to others posts. I don't know if you can use the search tool to see my posts but I have documented my recovery process in a round about way over the past 16 months it may give you some insight to the things I went through emotionally as well as physically, to get to the place I am at today.
I am one of those patience that will probably begin to fall away from this site because I am moving on to re-enter my life. I will keep contact as best I can but honestly I am starting to get so busy I don't have much time to sit and stare at the computer screen. That is such a wonderful thing to say, to busy. I didn't think it possible just 5 months ago. You are in a faze of your treatment that is extremely uncomfortable, physically debilitating and emotionally confusing, you are experiencing things that just seem to pop up and hit you. Take comfort in knowing that there is a recovery at the end of this process. When will that be? Hard to say, soon maybe not, but it will come. Try to focus on dealing with things you can effect and compensate for the ones you can't. Eventually they won't feel so devastating.
First step, get a response from Dr. Lundsford before reacting in crisis mode. The people I trust the most are the guys who deal with AN as their specialty. Easier said than done believe me I know. I hope you get positive advice and good news, those of us who precede you are praying with you and look forward to hearing from you again. We are walking this path with you.
Ed