Hello,
It's the original poster, and I have been actively following the discussion but did not feel I had anything essential to contribute. All of your knowledge and generosity and passion are very much appreciated. Actually, today I had a brainstorm that I am going to further investigate re our 23-yr-old son with the 4 mm neuroma.
Through an incredibly lucky coincidence, which proves once more to a native Los Angelean that our city is really quite small, a friend called and reported that his new neighbor just arrived from Europe to head the Neural Tumor Research Center at the House Institute and was a specialist in ANs. The doctor invited us to call him directly, my husband spoke with him today, and says that the doctor was incredibly kind and generous with his time.
Apparently, in Europe, small ANs such as our son's are not treated with either radiation or surgery, but are watched and monitored with regular MRIs. It is not expensive in Europe to use MRIs to monitor ANs over lengthy periods, and that is done frequently. Interestingly, he says that he is going soon to an international conference where there will be a lot of discussion re possible malignancy many years following the radiation of benign tumors, a dispute which he says is very much alive. So all of this has got me to thinking...
We are all relying on our son's subjective report that his hearing has gotten worse recently because he says he uses one ear more than the other to listen to his cell phone. The MRI confirmed that he has a small AN with a loss of high frequency hearing in his right ear. However, this is not the first time that our son has had a hearing loss confirmed. When he was 10-12 years old he visited an ENT several times, and was diagnosed at that time as having some loss. We can't remember now whether it was in one ear, but something about "high frequencies" seems familiar. So...could it be that if we are able to find our son's audiograms from 10 plus years ago that the loss was already apparent? Could it be that he had an AN that has been stable for all these years, and that his subjective report of loss today was instead something he just "noticed" for the first time, and now just keeps on noticing. After all, he is becoming much more aware and mature in many respects over the last few years. As a wild and crazy teenager, he just may not have noticed or paid attention to his uneven hearing deficit.
So today it seems like it would be a very good idea to watch and wait, which was actually a very realistic option suggested by Dr. Chang, at least for 6 months. We will search for the original audiograms, and then will actually have something to compare.
It could be that I am reaching for an answer that is what I "want", rather than the medical realities, but I'm pretty comfortable that this is an avenue that is worth pursuing.
Thanks to all of you for everything you provide our community.
Katherine