Hi,
I was diagnosed with an 1.2 x 1.2 x 1.4 acoustic neuroma above my left ear in August 2015, and I had a second MRI six months later with two measurements of 1.3 x 1.3. The neuro-radiologist, who had read both scans, said the difference in measurement was due to margin error and not to evidence of growth, but one of my doctors said he believed it had grown slightly.
My AN was found accidentally, because my former internist had put me on a wrong medication, which brought on a volcanic headache and subsequent MRI. At the time, I either didn't exhibit any symptoms or I wasn't aware of them. But now my left ear feels increasingly clogged and, strangely, overheated. I can't stand it, but my doctor has advised that I Watch and Wait, primarily because the surgery may cause hearing loss, and since I now can hear out of both ears he's afraid I'd be very upset if my left hearing disappeared after the surgery.
What he says makes sense, but I'm a bit concerned, because from my understanding whatever symptoms I have before surgery will remain afterwards, and things seems to be getting worse symptomatically by the day. That said, I don't know if what's happening is psychological, or real.
A week ago, I became so upset by the clogged feeling, I pushed a Q-Tip with alcohol into my left ear, which caused an even stranger sensation.
I don't know if Watch and Wait is for me, a 56-year-old woman who is terrified of both surgery and Watch & Wait, in equal measure. The WW is too suspenseful, whereas the surgery brings on thoughts of decreased IQ, facial palsy, memory and balance problems. I've basically decided against radiation.
I can't imagine my acoustic neuroma won't grow -- I don't understand why it would stop growing permanently, which some people say does happen. How often is that? Are there good studies on the subject? If it's going to stop growing for a few years and then start again, what's the point in waiting?
Does taking aspirin help stop its growth, as recent studies have indicated?
Even if it doesn't grow -- a big IF -- can't its presence still cause deafness, palsy, imbalance?
Bottom line, the situation is very confusing, and the most torturous part is I think I did it to myself, with constant cell phone use over the past fourteen years, without earbuds and the phone always held over my left ear.