Hi, Nancy:
I believe many AN patients have had their AN 'discovered' by an MRI that was intended to check out a different condition. I did.
When I presented to my PCP with unilateral hearing loss (long-term at that point), dizziness, sudden loss of taste as well as appetite, fatigue and a stabbing pain on the side of my skull along with a 30+ pound weight loss (totally unintended) he suspected thyroid, but that test came back negative. Next, he suspected a sinus condition and that entailed an MRI scan. My doctor called me at home the evening of the day I had the MRI (never a good sign) and said, in effect: "
The good news is that your sinuses are fine. The bad news is that you have an acoustic neuroma.....a big one...that can't be treated with radiation, alone. You'll need surgery, and soon." My brilliant response was:
"whats an acoustic neuroma?" I soon found out, as we all do.
I trust you'll remain asymptomatic for a long while but that is impossible to predict. I wish you all the best, Nancy.
Jim