Thank you all for your responses yesterday and today. The holidays and January flew by and here we are in February. Hi v357139. My MRI showed no growth. I was relieved, but as you said "ewhitese," I have moved more toward considering the translab surgery and some away from maintaining my watch and wait status because of the vertigo attacks. Also, I have phenergan suppositories which I think are better for the nausea. The meclizine used to make me sicker when I took it for motion sickness when I was a child. I haven't spoken to anyone who has used it for vertigo attacks, so I've been reluctant to use it. My ENT prescribed it for me after my attack in July, and I did get it filled. But the balance doctor I saw in September said that she did not think meclizine would help my vertigo. The phenergan helped with the attack in October. I think it stopped the vomiting. I hope you don't have another episode, ewhitese. Three days of it sounds awful.
I had another horrible vertigo attack mid-January. I had gone to the mall to exchange something and began having vertigo when I stepped out of the stairwell into the cavernous ground floor of the parking garage. One of the webinar presenters (I think it was Patrick Shumrick) mentioned that sometimes people with vertigo can experience it in large warehouse types of structures, like Sam's. I remembered that, so I went to the wall to get my bearings and thought I'd be ok. By the time I got inside, I realized this was going to be an attack, called my husband to come get me, and made my way to the restroom. Someone went to get the store manager, and my husband arrived to get me home. Being sick like that in a public place pretty much horrifies me, but thank goodness I was able to get to a restroom. It is sort of like rock-star status being wheeled out in a wheel chair through the wedding dresses and formals! Ugh!!! I'm hoping that was a one-time experience!
ANGuy, thank you for the neuro/oto Dr.'s explanation. That makes sense. had a VNG eval in August. My vestibular nerve impairment is 41%. Maybe it has to get to 50% or more before I stop having these attacks. I went to another balance therapist in January to get some exercises to strengthen my good side. She told me that the vertigo was caused by the otoliths being in the semicircular canals, and gave me the Eppley maneuver to use when I have vertigo. My neuro/oto disagrees, as do I, that the otoliths are the cause of the vertigo. I won't be going back to that balance therapist. My doc keeps saying, "You have a tumor on your vestibular nerve. It is causing the problems."
I am interested in the decision-making process people go through when moving from W&W to a treatment option. Yes, if I am on the almost done side of having vertigo attacks, then I think I can endure it, if they are not extended over days, like some of you have mentioned. But, I am concerned that it may be more difficult to not damage the facial nerve the longer I stay in W&W. Where are you all on that issue? What have your doctors told you?
Ok...this is way too long, but I wanted to respond to you all. I hope your New Year is going well and that the vertigo is stays at bay. I do appreciate having people to talk to about this. I appreciate all of you.
Peace, Melissa