He didn't mention hearing, but I will hold out hope that at least some of it returns. I went from no symptoms at Christmas time to full blown symptoms now, including 100% hearing loss on my right side. Which of the surgical removals requires the smallest incision?
Hi Steve, and welcome to the forum. As I live in the Pacific NW, I am no help on NE doctors.
In answer to a question Brian raised about why is hearing so sensitive, I will relate a little of a discussion on the subject with my ENT. First, hearing is a sensory nerve, which are more sensitive to damage than motor nerves like the facial nerve. They tend not to grow back or reconnect once they are harmed. Hearing is also sensitive because of blood flow to the little hair cells in the cochlea, the key to hearing in the first place. Any disruption can lead to hair cell death and loss of cochlear function, so you can be deaf even with a perfectly good hearing nerve. The blood vessel for the inner ear passes through the IAC canal, along with all those nerves, and is often hijacked by the AN, as well as getting squeezed by it. They don't call it an acoustic nueroma for nothing.
In general, if you have lost 100% in the AN ear, you are unlikely to get back anything useable, if anything at all. If it was a sudden hearing loss, you might ask a doctor if a steroid treatment right now has any chance of restoring some hearing, before you do anything else.
Facial nerve preservation then becomes the main objective. Surgery has the advantage of also taking out the AN side balance nerve, so you just have to adjust to working with one good nerve. The other option is radiation, which has a low incidence of facial nerve issues, and those are usually temporary ones arising from swelling in the following months. It doesn't take out the balance nerve, though, and sometimes people have trouble with a leftover dysfunctional nerve. At 2.4 cm, you also have to consider possible swelling issues with respect to the brain stem itself.
So you might end up with one of those "C" shaped incisions yourself. They look impressively scary at first, but by all accounts, they heal right up and vanish from sight pretty quickly. Not really anything to worry about. I like Katie's last line - do your research, make a decision, and then accept that at that point, it is out of your hands.
Steve