Hi Sandy
These tumors usually grow very slowly, and yours is small. It's called a schwannoma, in people with nuerofibromatosis, it's called a neurofibroma. You will probably be given three options, 1. watch and wait- having serial MRI's to monitor the growth rate, some actually stop growing on their own for a long period of time; 2. radiosurgery- precisiely focused beams of radiation that scramble the tumors DNA, causing it to stop growing and shrink over time; 3. surgical removal- there are a few surgical approaches used, depending on the size of the tumor, and whether you still have good hearing or not.
With radiosurgery and surgery, tumor control rates are about the same. With radiosurgery, there is less chance of nerve damage resulting in hearing loss or other issues, but there is still a chance. With surgery, the tumor is usually removed immediately, however there are more risks of complications and nerve damage, and a slight chance they may not remove the tumor 100%, in which case you can always have radiosurgery on any remaining tumor to stop it's growth. Both options are viable, and both have pros and cons. If you are considering radiosurgery, check out
www.anarchive.org , it has alot of patient stories and info on myths and misinformation you may encounter on your new journey. John Hopkins is a facility that practices both treatments, so they are probably a good place to go for unbiased opinions.
I had CyberKnife radiosurgery for my schwannoma, which is on a lower cranial nerve than an AN, but pretty much the same thing.
Good luck, don't panic, and do your research. You'll be fine.
As for neurofibromatosis, there are two kinds. NF-1, which is what the elephant man was thought to have, is usually diagnosed during childhood. It is very rare and symptoms include multiple nerve sheath tumors on many parts of the body, multiple dark large round or oval birth marks, freckles on your armpits or other skin folds that usually are not exposed to sun, bone deformities, small brown tumors on the iris of the eyes called lisch nodules, and sometimes learning disabilities. NF-2 is also rare, it's completely different from NF-1 and the main symptom is having an AN on both sides.