Last Tuesday, my husband had retrosigmoid with Friedman and Gionnatta at Keck. They were lovely and did the best they could to remove my husband's 1.6 cm tumor and leave the facial nerve and hearing nerve intact, but although the ABR showed function throughout the surgery, one week later, he has no functional hearing in his right ear. Although we knew the risks, we are both devastated. We hoped to beat the odds. We wanted to come back here and share a full success story.
In good news, they got the entire tumor, and although it was tangled in the facial nerve, his facial nerve is perfect, his pain is manageable with motrin, and he is almost back to full balance function already. He's walking several miles a day and eating as usual. The scar looks great, and the swelling is going down, albeit slowly. I know that this is all excellent news. But still: as you are all aware, to wake up with SSD when you had full hearing the night before is jarring and terrifying. We are hoping that others can tell us how this plays out.
These are some questions we have. We would really appreciate all the advice, words of encouragement, and suggestions you have.
1. How long did it take folks before the feeling of fullness goes away, if ever? H says that it feels like someone stuffed cotton in his head.
2. H is reporting that people's voices sound just a smidge higher: like everyone is sucking a tiny bit of helium. Did others experience that? When does that change, if ever?
3. We were advised to wait 6 months before looking for hearing aids. Did others wait that long? Why?
4. H hears popping and tones (but no voice recognition at all) from his AN side. Do those fade?
5. We recently moved to the DC area, and did not have a "primary care" doc for the AN, as we scheduled the surgery pretty recently after moving. What kind of doc should manage H's after care? He needs to get set up with whomever will help with hearing aids, etc., when it's time. Suggestions?
6. H aspires to be one of those folks who says that SSD has simply become a fact of life, and one that he doesn't really notice any more. Does anyone have any suggestions or advice for how to get to that point? Because this? This part is so, so hard.
Thanks in advance for any and all replies.