Zoe,
Let me be the next to welcome to the forum. Yes, a diagnosis is a shock.You are doing the right thing by going out and trying to find information before making a commitment to a treatment. That period of waiting to see the doctor for a consult can be unnerving. Know that because it is a benign condition, that you have the time to do your fact finding.
After all my reading, I learned that the treatment choice depends on the
size of the tumor, its location, and your hearing level mostly. It took me
until September (and I was diagnosed in May2001 and my treatment was at
the end of November2001) to know what I really wanted to do and where to go.
I considered each treatment option seriously and oftentimes felt overwhelmed
with all of the information. I learned that there is no one *best* way to treat it. It ends up being an individual decision. (see my thread that guides you through the decision making process).
http://anausa.org/forum/index.php?topic=5786.msg53229#msg53229My right sided growth was 1.5 cm. After reflecting over my experience, I
want to *emphasize* one thing: the experience, expertise and passion of the
doctor you select for treatment means everything no matter which treatment.
Most agree that they need experience with more than 100 cases.
Internet sites and reading about outcomes provides great info,
but it can also raise anxiety. Each tumor is individual and that makes the treatment outcomes "partly cloudy". They all can have unanticipated consequences--even waiting and watching.
Through my reading, I also learned about potential side effects and about
the many excellent facilities throughout the country. One of the first
decisions I made was that this was unique enough of a condition that it
warranted going where the expertise was. I looked for patterns in member posts related to
treatments and doctors.
Then it dawned on me that I didn't know how member's posts and the
side effects they were experiencing fit into the larger picture.How frequent
were side effects related to the various treatments? Could I generalize
from the qualitative data?That caused me to put together a chart. I wanted to know
the data related tohearing preservation, facial nerve preservation, in relationship to the
size of the tumor etc... It is another way to look at treatments.
This chart compared some of the various treatments using citations from
medical professionals, websites, or physician's e-mails. It is a laypersons
attempt to condense medical citations and information and that makes this
chart different from most. However, I am *not* a medical professional and no
decision should be made based on the chart. It was meant
to be a starting point for a conversation with your doctor. Please e-mail me if you'd like a copy.
Here is another link that you may find useful when you go to the doctor. (
http://anausa.org/forum/index.php?topic=53.msg72087#msg72087) I found it absolutely necessary to come in prepared with a list of questions to ask the doctor. Otherwise the doctors say what they want to say and are out of the room before you have a chance to digest what they have said and then to gather your thoughts enough to ask intelligent questions.The beauty of it is that you can print it out as many times as is necessary and there is a space for you to write notes.
I will search for the thread. (found it and copied it above)
Kindest Regards,
Kate