Most major decisions in our lives are somehow based on this, right? RE: ANs, we do research, talk to doctors and [online]friends in similar dire straits and start formulating a gut feeling about which way we will probably go. Options for treatment, statistics, and pt. individuality are pretty much all over the place, and once we become aware of them, it basically comes down to what our gut is telling us to do.
I sit here and read through radiation threads. I read about surgery. A questions arises and I bounce over to balance issues. When real fear strikes, I start picking apart the facial paralysis threads.
I bring this up because when I was diagnosed 6 yrs ago, I met with two different AN surgeons in the area. One was set against radiation, but I had/have a great deal of respect for his reputation and talent. The other also suggested surgery, but did not totally discount radiation as an option. At that time, I did not see any radiologists to discuss their procedures. Both surgeons agreed wait and see was a very reasonable choice for me and that's just what I did, with absolutely no regret.
So here I am, with a new MRI showing growth and my neurotologist recommending action - either surgery or radiation. He has, in the past 6 yrs, started doing GK himself, in addition to surgery.
Even though I chose to wait and see, as soon as I heard the tumor was growing and a choice had to be made, my gut was telling me "surgery". Each day I awaken from a previous day of research, I wake a bit more confident that that is the route for *me* to take. Don't get me wrong .... I'm scared. But I try to put that out of my mind, as if to forestall anthing bad happening. Stay positive ... and get scared all over again.
Although I find strange comfort with this gut feeling, I'm also somewhat puzzled by the fact that I ... someone who researches and picks apart all types of alternatives in life ... have not taken the initiative, or actually don't really have the desire, to talk to the radiation folks. Perhaps I don't believe they will change my mind. Perhaps I'm afraid they will throw my resolve out the window and make this an unbearable decision to make.
Have any of you just automatically gravitated to one option over the other? My guess is everyone probably saw a surgeon about their AN first and surgery either immediately and understandably scared the carp out of them, then proceeded to radiology docs, who allayed their fears and *set* their gut feeling. I'm sure most surg peeps probably did follow through with a radiology consult (yes?), but went back to surgery because their reality ... their "gut" feeling was that option.
I'm curious how and at what point in your research did your gut feeling kick in ... and, importantly, did it ever change once it did?
Thanks, folks