Rob,
I also respect the surgeons who spent time with me but said they could not remove the tumor without compromising the facial nerve.It shows self-awareness of limitation of their surgical skill. Nevertheless they provided their valuable insight into the nature of my problem and, of course, difficulty of my situation. Each one, therefore, contributed to my knowledge and allowed me make a decision that worked out at the end.
Jim and Jan,
Every form of treatment can be called a panacea and advertised as such. 20 years ago, when I had my first surgery, microsurgery was the only option. There was no radiation. While I was having a regrowth, I watched radiation come up. Now we know that it is a viable option but not for everybody and every case. Back then, however, many radiation specialists advertised it as a panacea and wanted to radiate every single tumor regardless of its size, location and nature. They wanted to "save people from the experience of undergoing open brain surgery". Great argument but it did not always work. Even HEI, who was always pro-surgery, last year acquired GK machine and started doing radiation. There are people who say that CK is too new to consider and there is no long-term data but plenty of people on this board had wonderful outcomes. Same thing with endoscopic version: it is not a panacea, and not for everybody, but it is a viable option. The fact that so few people who had endoscopic resection are on the board is actually good: they had great outcomes, need no support and moved on with their lives.
I am not pro- any form of treatment. I am pro-patient and pro-choice; it is whatever works. I want everybody to have a symmetric smile, small or no scar and keep their hearing. I want everybody walk straight, be pain-free and have minimum interruption to his/her life.
Endoscopy
is front-page news. Here is an article on its development and its effect on every single surgical specialty:
http://nymag.com/bestdoctors/articles/02/kindestcut/ Every week I read in the news new developments in surgery and they are always in minimally invasive/endoscopic area. Here is an example that I already posted:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080519092213.htmHrissy,
Endoscopic version is just like microsurgery in terms of its risks but much easier to go through. If everything goes OK, you spend 2-3 days in a hospital and a tiny sliver of hair is shaved. There is no bonnet after surgery, just some tape. You can also wash your hair right after the hospital. I almost felt guilty doing so! The incision is tiny - 8 or 9 stitches. For me, there was no pain as Dr. Shahinian went through the metal. No bone to drill, therefore, no pain. The surgery is half as short as traditional and there is no heavy anesthesia. In other words, it is fast and easy. You can fly right after surgery but probably should not. SBI is the only endoscopic facility in the USA who gave me a good prognosis and they do big tumors.
HEI is also excellent but they do traditional surgeries. They also have experience with big tumors and recurrences - very important for you.
There is another brilliant surgeon in NYC I was impressed with - Dr .Sen. Here is the info:
http://www.docnet.org/physicians/phys_bios.aspx?phys_id=1606I am sure there are other doctors in the US who do recurrences and big tumors but I cannot help you there.
Eve