I finally met my neurosurgeon after an 8 week wait (Dr. Akagami at Vancouver General in B.C.). You should have seen my list of questions! I was glad he never made me feel rushed, and took the time to answer everything. I was in there for 1 hr 10 minutes! Talk about a confident (cocky?) guy! He assured me with confidence that he is the top surgeon for AN's in all of Canada, and one of the top for North America (gotta love that modesty.....LOL). I was concerned about statistics to do with how often he has done this surgery so I called down to the House Ear institute in California and spoke to a doctor there. They told me that they would *hope* that a surgeon has done at least 60 of these in his/her career, and does 2-3 every 2 months at a minimum. (he was trying to help me put some parameters around what a decent amount would be). With that in mind, I asked Dr. Akagami the questions, and was happy to find out he does between 30-50 per year, and has done so since 2001. Even at the lowest calculations, that means about 210 of these. He guestimates one every 1-2 weeks. So overall, those sound like pretty good rates.
More important than that, were his personal statistics on things like facial paralysis. He told me that for a tumor of my size and placement (3.1 x 3.0 x 2.5....you'll note this is higher than my signature stats. Lucky me, it's bigger than they thought!) has about a 50% chance of paralysis nationally, but that his statistic is up around 90% (success rate). He did caution me that it is likely I will experience facial weakness, and it could last anywhere from 6 wks to 6 months. Please understand, I know everyone is different....I am just repeating what he said).
The bad news is that he has the longest wait times of any surgeon in North America for this type of surgery (so I'm told, who knows?) We're talking months instead of weeks. :-( The worst part about that is that they won't give me a date. They say they don't give dates until 2-3 weeks before the surgery b/c it changes too much due to critical cases being put ahead. :-( Best guess is end of June, beginning of July.
He told me that 3cm is the maximum size they would do radiation on this type of tumor, and that they strongly recommend against it in this case b/c of the fear of slight swelling increasing the size and causing me even more difficulties (I have balance, dizziness, facial shocks and hearing loss).
He highly recommending the Retrosigmoid approach, because A) he is extremely experienced in it, B) he likes the angle that it allows him to view the tumor from, C) he has had high success rates with it, with less than average complications. So even though I went in there thinking I was going to get Translab (for fear that Retro would be more likely to have facial nerve complications and headaches), he assured me that neither of those were more likely. I trust him, and will go ahead as he wishes.
Guess I don't need to tell you how scary going over all of the potential complications was!!!???! Yikes!
They estimate the surgery taking 8 hrs, and after listing off a team of 15 people in the room I stopped counting. Unbelievable! He mentioned me being 'braced' on the head during the surgery (can anyone give more details about what this is about? I understand it's to keep me still.....). If all goes well, he guesses 3-4 days in hospital.
Lots of information to process! Thanks for listening, and for all of your input to date.
Adrienne
P.S. I'm sure all of you know this, but Donnalynn is absolutely amazing. Even though she's going through her own personal hell with her hubby not even 1 year after her surgery, she took time out of her day to call and reassure me (a complete stranger!) a few weeks ago and spent over an hour talking me through it and giving me tips. Absolutely amazing.........