Wow, very interesting perspective Just Wondering
May I respectfully say that your attitude quite frankly scares me? Acoustic neuromas aren't generally life threatening - and neither is gadolinium. In fact, if you have to have a brain tumor, an AN is the one to have. 99.9% of them are benign.
Not to be boastful, but not all of us on the forum who have had surgery - or radiation - have "big issues". My surgery was almost 2 years ago and I don't have facial paralysis, the inability to close my eyes, the inability to eat properly, headaches, etc. - and I'm not alone. And those on the forum who do have some issues typically don't live a life any less enjoyable or normal than mine.
If you've ever taken a Rx medication and read about the possible side-effects, you'll realize that lots of things in life can bring on unpleasant things or yes, even kill you. But everything in life has risks - and death is inevitable at some point in time. Death from the treatment of an AN is very, very rare - you have a bigger chance of dying from not treating one.
Yes, the forum has some "frightening stories", but it also has numerous ones that aren't frightening. And most of the "frightening" ones have silver linings. It's important to remember that we are all unique and we all have different experiences - in our AN journeys and in our lives outside of our ANs.
It sounds like your internist definitely has your best interests in mind and in my opinion, you should trust him and get the MRI. The gadolinium would be the best way to detect an AN, but sometimes they are seen without the use of it.
I am single and 47 - I have children, but I take care of them, they don't take care of me. I was luckly enough to have family members who helped me through the recovery from my surgery. If I didn't have family members I could have had friends or hired nursing care to help me through post op for the short period of time that I felt I absolutely had to have someone with me - in reality only about 1 or 2 weeks.
At this point in time you seem focused on surgery and how you'd handle it. Do you realize that ANs are also treated with radiation? and if you have an AN and that's an option for you, it's completely different than surgery. It might be something you'd be more comfortable with. But we're both jumping the gun here - you may not even have an AN.
Most of us (AN or not) are stronger than we think and can get through just about anything we set our minds to - you aren't any different. Believe you can deal with this and you'll find you can.
Best of luck. Please go for the MRI.
Jan