Hello,
Many thanks to everyone who has read my posts regarding my UK friend with the AN diagnosed last February of this year. I appreciate so much the responses I have received so far. My friend is very busy running his own large company with many employees in the UK, so he doesn't have much time to do any researching on the Internet re: his condition. He also doesn't have a working computer at home. He has a new I-Phone at home but it has somehow stopped working. Said it stays frozen on one page. Anybody familiar with that?
I know he has never had a health issue in the past that has been as scary and uncertain as this diagnosis, so it has had him feeling upside down in so many ways. Since his February diagnosis, I have felt compelled to do research of AN's. When I first started middle of that month, all I could come up with was just information about the condition itself and the various ways of treating it. Knowing he would undergo the radiation with cyberknife, I wanted to learn what effect it can have on a patient who has had it, since my friend had to be hospitalized for a few days after his first, large single dose in late February. I wanted to have lots more of an understanding of what he was going through and needed to read actual patients' stories of their experiences. It wasn't until I found the ANA site, sometime in April after he tried to break things off with me (believing he had nothing to offer to further our relationship and hoped I would find someone else.) He didn't feel worthy of being with me. I didn't know at that time that it was actually his after effects and symptoms that were talking to me in his e-mail. Something in him wanted us to not lose contact all together, though, because he had come to have feelings for me as I have for him.
I found where support groups are located here in southeast Florida and got in touch with one of the group leaders. I corresponded with her for a while and she helped me learn even more about the AN experience and the ways patients handle their journeys, what the symptoms and side effects are and any long-term effects, and especially, what the new normal is.
I think this is what my guy friend has yet to come to terms with -- the new normal, what his new normal will be. I don't think that's been determined yet, though. He is still reeling from his second, smaller dose of radiation with cyberknife on April 24th. The doctors don't know yet if any further doses would be safe for him to have. Right now, he is still feeling the fatigue at day's end and his balance needs to get better. I have told him of vestibular exercises. What's bothering him the most now is the, apparently, sudden hearing loss in his AN ear (right side ear) since last September (2013). I think of the hearing loss as like a garden hose with the water running through it. If enough weight is put on it, the water flow will come to a stop or a trickle. So, the AN, I think no matter what size it is, puts enough pressure on the nerve (or adjacent nerves as well), to cut off one's ability to hear. With the AN gone, by surgery or shrinkage via radiation and no further growth, the pressure is relieved on the nerve and hopefully, hearing could slowly come back if there has not been too much damage to it with all that pressure on it. But, years could pass before this could happen in the case of radiation with either cyber knife or gamma knife or other forms of radiation, which I am not yet familiar with yet. This is something I haven't yet discussed with my friend. It is my great hope, and his I'm sure, that somehow, the tumor will die off and shrink, therefore taking off all that pressure on the affected nerves, helping to restore his hearing.
I would think that hearing would be totally gone in the case where the nerve has been severed. But, can that happen with radiation? Does anyone know anything about this? Can radiation cause the affected nerve to become severed?
I have suggested to my friend about the 2 types of hearing aids that PaulW mentioned, cros or BAHA. My friend will be calling me tomorrow morning from work and I will mention to him again about these 2 types of hearing aids. He's desperate to have at least some of his hearing back.
My friend also wants to know more about vestibular exercises and what they are. What should I tell him?
Any feedback or suggestions would be most welcome and very appreciated. Thanks so much. It is great to be a part of this wonderful group of caring people and I wish everybody well in their journeys and I hope that their journeys come to a very happy and satisfying end.
All good thoughts to everyone,
Tina