Thanks for the responses guys. a few answers to your questions. I live in Chicago. I'm 30ish. I'm told by doctors that the tumor in my head is in the neighborhood of a golfball size. The two surgeouns I spoke with alredy..i'm sorry, three, have said to go right to the surgery and bypass the radiology. It also has some cystic qualities. from what i know i'm going to be in the hospital for 5-6 days. How are they going to treat my pain during this time? How about when I leave? I highly doubt advil or tylenol are going to cut it. Have all of you guys lost your hearing in the effected ear? Right now my hearing isn't that bad. I would like to save it. So, again thanks to everyone who has written back. And for those "lurking" but don't type I invite you to break the ice and we'll talk. but for this post's topic i want to discuss pain management after the surgery;
My personal experience:
Due to size, location, and rapid growth I was also advised to move ahead to surgery instead of radiation. It was a choice I was very comfortable with.
I had my surgery on Wed, and came home Sunday afternoon. The first 24 hours I was in neuro-ICU and on IV morphine and oral codeine for pain. By 48 hours post-op, I was on just the oral codeine. By Tuesday post-op (a couple days after I came home) I switched myself to just Advil/Tylenol because I hated the way the narcotics made me feel - and no one tells you how constipating narcotics are! That got to be worse than the head pain! Ugh!
And I was surprised at how well the OTC meds worked - but Advil has always worked well for me. I stayed on Advil 24 hours/day until about 3 weeks post-op. Now I'm taking it every couple of days for a headache, but that's it.
And yes, the hearing on my AN side is 100% gone, but it was 95% gone pre-op so I honestly have not noticed a difference. I also haven't noticed a difference in my balance from pre-op. I was given a prescription for meds to help with dizziness, but I haven't needed it for two weeks now.
Everyone has their own unique experience and reaction to the surgery. And I know I've been very lucky. But I also know it was immensely helpful, for me, to read about others' experiences when I was waiting around for my surgery.
Katie