G'day again
I was on steroids when first diagnosed but the AN was already 4cm so it was a quick decision to get it out as I didn't know about the bit of hearing loss or the dizzy spells I'd been having right up to the day of diagnosis when I was nearly hit by a car that I didn't hear. My face went tingly and I was as deaf as a post on the left side and it was sudden. I thought I was having a stroke.
We dont' have follow-up MRI's as a general 'rule' in Australia. I think they wait till we have a symptom
I'm on Vallium if I have an anxiety attack - these started after having so many surgeries in such a short time. I have spina bifida in my lower back so I'm on pain meds (codeine) and Endep for sleeping. I've developed acid reflux so the doc put me on Omeprazole. I can't sleep on my AN side due to having a hip replacement on the same side that I had a tendon taken from that leg to use for the sling in my face.
I was on something else for the dizziness but after learning how to walk and move around more slowly I find I'm less dizzy so weaned off them.
The hearing thing was a big problem but not for me - for the people around me. It's them that also have to adjust to what we've been through and a lot of the time hubby still stands on my left side to say something and I now say simply "I can't understand you". I used to be the one to move to the other side of him but now I make him do the moving LOL My grandchildren are the ones who have adjusted better than most to how I am. They're 15, 13, 2 and 6 months. The oldest two have been amazing.
The fullness in my head sometimes gets bad but I haven't been able to figure out why except it could be that I'm doing something in a way to aggravate it like bending forward or even looking up. I don't knit in bed anymore. (At 57 I took up knitting to keep my brain active LOL)
What I can tell you confidently is - if we come to terms with all the changes that we're going through then it's easier to cope. The first place I come to is here and search for whatever it is that I'm feeling to see if it's 'normal'. Everything from tinnitus (don't get me started on all the noises that go on inside my deaf ear where there's no middle ear or ear drum
) to earaches, dizziness, wonkyness (swaying, runnng into walls, and getting off balance), and feeling off in general.
Someone on the forum asked if anyone felt different. I didn't answer because everyone that had replied said they were the same. I'm not. I do things differently, I think differently, and I try to plan the next day as if it's going to be a good day. I took this for granted pre-op.
Anyone that's had their head opened up and had human hands inside their head may just feel a bit different than they did before.
If it was a broken bone we'd 'get over it'. This is so much more different that it's hard to explain except for coming here where we have a soft place to land when we need a hug or advice.
Hugs to you and please keep writing and I'll keep reading.
Suu xxoo