When we are first diagnosed with an AN, many of us just want it gone.
We want to be back to how we were and the thing that has caused us this inconvenience removed.
I think this is a very natural reaction.
After stopping and thinking about it for a while.. What I really wanted, was to live out my life as normal as possible.
If that is your end goal, take a deep breath, your AN is smallish. you have time.
Surgery is one option, and if you really want it physically gone its the only option.
The downside of surgery is that it comes with inherent risks.
While many emerge from surgery and have a great result, it is a bit of a coin toss.
There is a risk that surgery could lead to a quality of life worse than W&W or radiation.
This is very difficult surgery and is why you should choose a team with extensive experience.
I believe about 5% of people on W&W have a tumour that shrinks, and never need intervention.
A small percentage have perfect hearing after 10 years on W&W.
Depending on the study it has been demonstrated that between 40 to 60 percent of people can remain on W&W and do not need intervention. Although hearing loss is a consequence for many on W&W.
Long term hearing loss after surgery is also high, and after radiation too.
I chose radiation because like you I wanted to deal with it, but did not want the downside risk that surgery might bring.
If radiosurgery didn't exist I would have chosen W&W because there is a fair chance that I could have been one of the 40-60% that don't need intervention.
I am nearly 3 years post cyberknife I still have my hearing, balance is good, and I live my life exactly as I did before diagnosis. I avoided the significant risk of surgery.
I could not be happier. The stress of whether the tumour was growing or not vanished the day I had it zapped