11AM Dr. Lederman Discusses Various Treatments for Cancer - podcast episode cover

11AM Dr. Lederman Discusses Various Treatments for Cancer

Feb 10, 202557 min
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Transcript

Speaker 1

The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed.

Speaker 2

For cancer treatment. Most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York, First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liderman hits your cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers

from head to toe. Cancer treatment with possibly a second chance for you even if chemo radiation or surgery didn't work or isn't tolerated. Goals are your best results and quality of life. Meet doctor Leaderman to hit the cancer. He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist. Call two one two choices, two one two choices to meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Book of DVD two super Convenient Broadway in

thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to hit your cancer. Call two one two choices two one two choices.

Speaker 3

It's Doctor Leaderman with Carrie Stubbs, who sings and writes about his cancer treatment.

Speaker 4

Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight cataplane hop a train, don't has a tait. Call to on two choices for an appointment, Mate, so cancer can be said straight? My cancer it was twenty two centimeters. Now I am cancer free. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospital stay, no chemoparraphy. I'm grateful to Doc taleder Man at New York Radio Surgery. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospitals. Day made me very happy. Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight. If he addressed

my cancer had been set straight. Called to and two choices for an appointments Mate, the Tleeder Men's top rights.

Speaker 3

For more information about innovative cancer treatment, called doctor Leederman two and two choices, two and two choices, thirteen eighty four Broadway. Most insurance is accepted for newer recurrent cancers. Call Doctor Leederman two and two choices.

Speaker 5

Welcome everybody.

Speaker 6

It's the Radio Surgery Show with Doctor Gil Leiderman, MD, New York's only Harvard trained triple Board certified Radiation oncologist who brings you the latest cancer treatment news, interviewing world renowned cancer experts, delving to special cases, and of course.

Speaker 5

Answering your questions.

Speaker 6

I'm Rob Redstone, broadcasting from the WR Studios in the heart of New York City and now please welcome doctor Leaderman.

Speaker 7

Good day.

Speaker 3

This is doctor Liederman, and thank you Rob, and thank you no and thank you for tuning in today and every day on the radio.

Speaker 7

Every day we try to educate and we edu.

Speaker 3

Okay, just like a medical student would go to medical school and learn patient by patient, or any doctor or nurse or healthcare professional, you learn by experience. And how do you get experienced, Well, you see one patient, another patient, and another patient, and after ten or twenty or thirty or forty or fifty years, you have a lot of experience. And that's why most people like an experienced doctor. And that's what we are here at Radio Surgery in New York,

the home of Radio Surgery. When all the other facilities and doctors and the hospitals everyone you can think of, all the super duper and elsewhere places, we're doing standard treatment. One doctor stood up and said, there's a better way,

and what is the better way? Well, the better way is to use radio surgery, which is non invasive, non invasive, no cutting, no bleeding, no anesthesia, no hospitals treatment, to send pinpoint treatment to the cancer area to try to attack the cancer with higher success.

Speaker 7

Why hire because we're more precise. That means you can increase the dose.

Speaker 3

And everyone should know or learned here that when you increase the dose and fewer treatments, the treatment is more successful. And that's the whole basis of radio surgery. It makes it so appealing for so many people, and that's why so many people come here.

Speaker 7

Also experience.

Speaker 3

Also the doctor the only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation doctor in New York, where the few in the world here at Radio City, New York also were centrally located. Also, it's easy to get to us. Also, there's most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. So there's lots of reasons people come here. But let's just jump in. I'll tell you about a person has maybe for you an unusual toment, but for us, this is someone we see an incredible man with incredible

cancer and incredible story. So he's eighty six year old. He's a banker. He's one of the hotshot bankers in New York City.

Speaker 7

He's widdled.

Speaker 3

His wife had died within the last month of seeing me, and he has two children. He's an investment banker. It presented with blood in the urine. So it's a very important learning experience. If you have blood somewhere it meetings, usually something is wrong. And so he had blood in the urine and he was going to a super pooper,

pooper pooper place. And I can tell you again, all the hospitals around, whether it's in New York or Connecticut or California wherever, they all think they're super booper and if you have any doubt, just check it out. Anyway, he had severe bleeding. He had blood in the urine. He went to the emergency room, but he saw the super pooper doctor at a super duper place and he just did not want to go back. The doctor wanted to do surgery on the bladder, and he just did

not want to do surgery. And furtherm we had an ultrasound of the kidneys. When there's a cancer in the bladder, sometimes the bladder mass blocks the kidneys. It's called hydro nephrosis hydros in other word for like water nephrosis of the kidney. So it's like a backup of the uear and if you have a backup of the urine, it's very destructive for the kidney. So he had multiple problems.

He had blood in the urine, He had a kidney mass, he had a bladder mass, he had a blockage of the urders which was blocking his kidneys, and he was seen by the super duper biggest places around town. He had a three point five centimeter mass in the bladder with severe hydronephrosis, and his kidneys were being affected. He had some pain, he had pain in the penis, he had pain in the palvis, and his weight was one fifty same as two years earlier, as five foot seven.

He's an ex smoker, And I could tie that for a couple of reasons. Number one, as we always ask, and number two, smoking has an important relationship to bladder cancers. Now, not everyone with bladder cancer is a smoker, but there's an increased risk like with many so many cancers and other diseases where it's heart disease or lung disease or lung cancer. Off with geo cancer kidney cancer. Smoking is

a big no no in our books. Anyway, he had smoked, he had stopped, and well, he was a security investment person. He came with his daughter. His wife died just a few days before he saw me. He's married for fifty years and he's very distraught about that. I examined him. His lungs were clear, as abdomen was soft, but there seemed to be a mass in the penis, and so I was very concerned that he had a bladder cancer, possibly with cancer to travel too, or a secondary cancer

or something else in the penis. So we arranged for someone to look in the bladder and to do scans and to open up his passageway of his kidneys. It's so important. He's been at a super duper place and no one ever told him about options. Here we talk about all the options. And even if we send you literature, you'll see options, or we come into our office, you'll see the art of a surgery options. And so he also has a history of atrio fibrillation, which is danger zone.

His interfibrillation is mitro valve disease. And well, his daughter, his daughter was very reluctant. His daughter liked super duper general and he just hated, hated, hated his experience. We took his blood pressure. His blood pressure was also high, so we had lots of issues going on with him. The main issue, of course, is the mass in the bladder and blood in the urine and this possible mass in the penis. And well, he came here and he checked out the biggest places in town, and well, he

liked to carry. He liked the personal carry, like the fact that he wasn't being cared for by a subordinate of the doctor. But he actually saw the real doctor. And that's another thing that's so different here. You see the real doctor, not a resident or a student or assistant. No, we believe if I go see the doctor, you should see the doctor. I can tell you so many people come here and I say, well, who saw you before? I said, well, this doctor, and then I go check

it out. It wasn't a doctor at all. And so often it's so many of the big places and even other places, the person you see may not be an MD at all, may not be a doctor at all. And often they don't even say hey, I'm not the doctor. They don't usually say that, they don't say or give a business card.

Speaker 7

Here.

Speaker 3

I'll give you a business card. You can find me day or night. You can email me, you can call me, you can come in here. You know who you're dealing with, whether it's myself or another doctor, you know who you're dealing with. So this man, what did we do? Well, first thing, we wanted to get checked out the bladder. Second thing, I wanted to check out and protect his kidney's. Third thing I wanted to check with it's in his penis. And actually he wanted to have a biopsy of the

penis first, and we arrange that immediately. How do you do a biopsy of the penis? Well, it's actually painless procedure, a tiny little needle into the mass and the penis. And sure enough he had bladder cancer that had traveled through the stream, through the bloodstream to the penis. So he had stage four cancer traveled to another organ. His cancer had traveled. The usual treatment well, he had been told elsewhere at Super Duper General that he should have

radical surgery on his bladder. He's eighty six est fibrillation and now thanks to coming here, we diagnosed that his cancer had already traveled. So removing that bladder would not have helped him want ioda.

Speaker 7

They never told him that.

Speaker 3

They never checked the penis, and never did a scan of the penis, and never did a biopsy the penis, even though I had been going there for years and no one talked to about protecting the kidneys. Here, the care is so different. So we staged him up. We found that he had cancer, cancer of the bladder that traveled to the penis. It did not go anywhere else, and he wanted only our treatment. I sent him to see chemo doctors. He did not want chemo, did not

want surgery, wanted radiosurgery. And we were able to treat him with radiosurgery here at thirteen eighty four Broadway to the bladder with great success, and to the penis with great success. And now he's been restaged. We've looked inside the bladder, eurologists bortzorified. Eurologists looked inside the bladder. The mass is gone. We looked at the penis. We've got MRIs of the penis, we've got MRIs of the bladder

and palvis and the rest of his body. In fact, and he's in remission from his stage for bladder cancer. With no surgery, no cutting, no bleeding, no chemo. Only our treatment for a cancer started in the bladder, probably related to the smoking years ago, although again, you can have a bladder cancer without being a smoker. Some people have it as secondhand smoke, and some people have never had exposure to smoke and still can have a bladder cancer. So how would you possibly know if you have a

bladder cancer. Well, blood in the urine is a warning sign, Pelvic pain is a warning sign. New urinary symptoms are warning signs. So there's lots of warning signs. If you think you have those warning signs, as you go get checked out. If you wish to come here, that's great. You can call us a two and two choices thirtyty four Broadway in the heart of New York City where except most insurances medicare Medicaid. My name's doctor Liederman. I can tell you this man is very grateful and very happy,

as is his daughter, that he's in remission. He has proof of that. He has scans in his hands. We looked inside the bladder, We've checked his kidney, and this is the work we do every day. Some people say, hey, doctor Leaderman, Okay, see you treat the patient, then what well, then what Then you get followed for the rest of

your life. That's what should happen because everyone wants to be checked out, everyone has questions, Everyone wants to make sure the cancer hasn't come back, doesn't come back, won't come back. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, in the heart of New York City. My name's doctor Liederman.

Speaker 8

Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when surgery didn't help and toxic chemo stopped working. Many come in pain. Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when their caregiver has no more care to offer. Doctor Liederman bringing innovative cancer care for decades. When the next cancer drug is not as promised, when surgery was to fail to pass, we may be able to offer you new cancer treatment options.

We treat new and recurrent cancers, small or large, most anywhere in the body, even if prior chemo, radiation or surgery didn't work. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices for a free booklet DVD, thirty eighth and Broadway. Most insurances Medicare Medicaid accepted. Harvard trained, Triple Board certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices for innovative cancer treatment. Best is to meet doctor Liederman in person. Call two and two choices

to two. I want two choices.

Speaker 3

It's doctor Liederman with guy talking about skin cancer treatment options.

Speaker 9

You treated me. I had basil cell onto my cheek. A buddy of mine went through the same thing that looked like they went out of him with a melon baller. This was on my face. I don't want any scring I think I'm kind of handsome. I wanted to keep it that way.

Speaker 3

So you are hats and we're going to Olympics. Usually in America there's three million skin cancers a year. Ninety nine percent of people or letdown the primrose path to have radical mos surgery for their skin cancer.

Speaker 7

Why are you different.

Speaker 9

From hearing what you report? You know, hey, you don't need to get radical deforming. Come and see what we could do. I have a lot of trust in what I've seen and what I heard, and the treatments were very simple.

Speaker 3

If Miss America comes up to here right now, what would she think about the results of your skin.

Speaker 9

She would be able to keep her hands off. There is zero indication it was ever there. You know, I don't know that I got the chance to say, hey, thanks, doctor Leadman. I tell anybody who's going down the same path. Doctor Leederman did the absolute perfect thing. That's where you should do.

Speaker 7

Any regrets, not at all.

Speaker 3

Call doctor Liederman had two and two Choices thirteen eighty four Broadway. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted.

Speaker 6

Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the w R Studios in the hearts of New York City.

Speaker 5

Were just a few steps.

Speaker 6

From the Radio Surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman the leading cancer expert treat prostate cancer non invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liederman at two and two Choices for a free informative booklet and DVD.

Speaker 5

Hey doctor Liederman, we're.

Speaker 7

Back, We are back.

Speaker 3

Can we talk about a man who's fifty four years old? Born in Ecuador. He's Marriti as two boys. He came with his son and his grandchild. He was referred by one of the biggest gurologists in New York. I mean biggest, famous with a huge practice. The urologists diagnosed his prostate cancer. The man had a prostate cancer glease in six Two of twelve cores were positive. PSA was five point four. He had a stage T one. He had an elevated PSA. The biopter was positive for cancer. He had a questionable

lesion in dudum by Katskin. He got an MRI which was negative. We saw gastrologists. He thought had a benign lesion in the pancreas, which is all unrelated to the prostate. His weight was one eighty five two years ago. It was about the same five foot eight. He had no pain, but he was urinating twice a night. We offered a medicine to help with the urine. He had no bleeding, no cough, no shorce of breath. He's a smoker, and

we advised him to stop smoking. Why because smoking can harm the body, and there's other things you can do. He had no prevadiation. His mother had breast cancer. His sister had gastric cancer, and both femin members had died of their cancer, so I was very concerned about having cancer. I examined him. He had a large prostate gleas in six PSA five point four. And I should tell you that he came to me eight years ago. He was sent here by a surgeon who hates to cut on

state cancer patients. Why because he knows when he cuts on prostate cancer patients, most men and impotent. About ninety seven percent are losing the directions. About eighty percent or peeing in their pants one time or another. And that's often life long. I can tell you it's often life long. I can tell you I see thousands of men. I've seen about twenty thousand men with prostate cancer, and it's

so often after surgery lifelong, also shortening the penis. So there's lots of reasons why men don't want surgery, radical or robotic prosettectomy if they know better. The problem is that most men are never told the option. Sad to say, it seems like the urologist who does the biopsy often leads the patient to radical surgery. Radical surgery is more common, and I think it's because of a conflict of interest that the surgeon who does the biopsy is a surgeon who moves the prostate.

Speaker 7

I think it's better.

Speaker 3

For men and their loved ones to im and get his second opinion before any operation or before any decision. And also I'll show you why our results are superior. We have a ninety five percent success rate in men like him in his category. He's very high, So it's very high success rate avoiding radical surgery. Most men keep their sex life, most men keep orinary life, ninety nine percent keep ordinary life. And of course there's no shortening of the penis because with us, there's no cutting or

bleeding or removal of the prostct. So this man was treated by us eight years ago. I didn't tell you that part. He's fifty four years old when he came to us eight years so he's now sixty two and he's in remission, his PSA zero. And why am I talking about him today, Well, because he came for follow up.

Speaker 7

And as they.

Speaker 3

Said, we see patients routinely unfollow up to make sure they're fine. This man comes a couple of times a year. We check them out, examine him, get tests, and talk about any other issues that may be pertinent, whether it's getting a colonoscopy, or checking his lungs or checking his way. You're talking about bleeding. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Radio Searcher in

New York, the home of radio surgery. When all the other places were doing standard treatment, one doctor stood up and said there's a better way. And the doctor is still saying there's a better way, And you're welcome to find your way here if you wish, at thirteen eighty four Broadway, or except most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. I'll talk about an eighty year old woman, so a bit older than last man. She's a marriage, has three children. She came with her husband and two sons. She had a

uter's cancer stage four. She was diagnosed ten years ago. She had her uters removed, she had lymphanodes removed, she had pevic radiation and chemo elsewhere, And like I just talked about, standard radiation does not work very well for uterin cancers. Sad to say, chemo doesn't work. So you can say, why is it given? Why is chemo and radiation standard? Radiation and chemo give? And if it doesn't work. Well, well, I'll let you answer that question. You can figure it

out yourself. I believe we can talk about when you came in. When you come in, if you want to talk about it anyway. This woman now has shortness of breath. She has a mass on her airway. It's blocking her airway. She has trouble breathing and coughing. There's a mass there. And we talked about all the options surgery, which would be nearly impossible in this woman. There's a mass in the media steynum growing into the airway, blocking the airway.

Chemo really doesn't work for endometrial cancer very well. It may work for a few weeks or months, but then the cancer always grows back. With radiosurgery most likely ninety percent chance we can open the airway, we can shrink the cancer, and it's durable. Radio surgery is durable. So

we talk about treatment. When we treat a cancer, whether it's a primary or metastatic cancer, ninety percent of time the cancer will stop or shrink or go away where we treat it, which is so different than most disease, not every disease, but most diseases where chemo only works temporarily or not at all. So it's a big difference.

She came here with her sons and loving family, and we're treating her right now to open up the airway and improve her breathing when all the other treatments, standard radiation, surgery, removing the uters, chemotherapy didn't work. And why did she come here? She was at the biggest hospitals in New York. She came here because she wanted a new, fresh, second opinion.

And it's so useful for most people with cancer to get a new, fresh second opinion here with a doctor who's probably got more training and more experienced than most doctors that you'll see. I want to talk about a person who came to us, Well, he came a little bit too late, fifty seven year old black man. And I say that because in the black community, one in six black men get prostate cancer. One in twenty three will die of prostate cancer. So it's a very vicious disease.

Prestate cancer is the number to killer in men, the cancer killer long as cancers number one, prostage number two. There's nearly three hundred thousand men a year with prostate cancer diagnosed, and about forty thousand die and there are men like him.

Speaker 7

Sad to say.

Speaker 3

At fifty seven, he went and he had radical surgery, went to one of the biggest super pooper hospitals, and while he was left with radical surgery, he was left with loss of urinary control. He was told the cancers in the semino vesicles, he was told to have standard radiation. He went to one of the super pooper biggest hospitals for standard radiation, which radiated a lot of his bladder

and pelvic area, and he's lost directions. He lost urinary control at shortening of the penis, and the cancer came back, even with radical surgery, even with standard radiation, the cancer came back, and his PSA's rising and he's being seen by doctors at the super duper place. All they were doing was giving him hor hormone hormone treatments and now he's bleeding in the bladder while he's probably bleeding either from cancer that came back after radical pros detective mere

standard radiation, or he's bleeding from the radiation itself. And we checked him out. His bladder is tiny, so most likely he had radiation to the whole bladder area rather than our treatment, which would be more precise. We like to treat just the cancer area, which is more precise and easier and more successful. And sad to say, he didn't know all these differences. He didn't know all the

facts before he got his radical surgery. And he also didn't know that our treatment is markedly more successful than radical surgery. So not only can you avoid the loss of erections for most men, not every man, but for most men, loss of urinary control most commonly after surgery almost never happens with radiation, about one percent or And also there's no shortening of the penis. No one told him that. The surgeon did not tell him that. Just

like I talked about a few minutes ago. It seems like the surgeon does a biops, he likes to do the surgery. That's what happened at one of the biggest hospitals. He had surgery. They didn't do an MRI beforehand to see if the cancer was in the seminovesicle. They didn't do a PET scan to see if the cancer had traveled before the surgery, just did the surgery. Sad to say, so, he had the surgery didn't work. He had the standard radiation elsewhere.

Speaker 7

It didn't work.

Speaker 3

Now he's bleeding and he's got all the symptoms of men who have had radical surgery, and he just came here for a fresh second opinion. He's tired of going to Super Duper General and getting bad news, getting treatment that's not working, that's harming him, and that didn't work. His PSA after radical surgery should be zero. So the surgeon left cancer behind. They did not detect the cancer

in the seminal vesicle, which is so important. Then they gave him standard radiation, which not succeed and now he's back with a PSA that's rising. So we know the cancers in his body and he's bleeding, and so what are we doing. Well, we're checking out. We're checking out to look inside the bladder to see why he's bleeding. At Super Duper General. I spoke to the doctor, the doctor who supposedly looked in the bladder. Well, the patient said the doctor looked in the bladder. I called the

doctor and said she was not able to look. She was not able to see. But there was a resident there and the resident wasn't able to see either. So there are two doctors neither one could see. Probably got a super duper bill at a super duper place by a super duper doctor, but no one has a diagnosis. And so sad to say, so important if you have a prostator or their cancer, so important to go to a place where they show you the data first, they talk about all the options. We try to give the

best treatment first. This is what we do, and we have data proving showing better results than I'll show you a proton beam data and radical protective me and other methods of radiation data here comparison data which the best of my knowledge, you'll never see somewhere else. So this man's in trouble. His cancers come back after radiation, after surgery. Now he's bleeding, has most likely a complication for more cancer or from the standard type radiation. So this is

the work we do. And we'll be talking about him again in future as we get tests on him.

Speaker 7

This is what we do.

Speaker 3

And I want to talk about another man who also has a small bladder. This is a man who had prostate cancer. He had standard radiation weeks and weeks in another facility in New York City. He now presents with frequent urination. He's yearning five times a night, multiple times in the daytime. He's on non medications. He had standard radiation two years ago. He also gave him loopron. I can tell you that most men that come here do not want to be on hormones. They know that hormones

damages this sexual life, damages urinary control. Often men have weakness of the bones, sitting of the bones, also gonna grow breasts, also gonna have hot flashes. Well, he had all the treatments elsewhere, standard radiation and hormones, and now he has a small bladder. Normal bladder holds about two or three hundred CC's. His bladder holds only sixty eight ccs. Wow, oh wow, oh wow. So we're here to try to

help him. And this is the work we do. We do see men and women and children with cancer, whether it's prostate, breast, long, pancreas, liver, you name it. We have probably the largest experience with doctors performing innovative non invasive treatment, first with radio surgery, first with brain radio surgery in New York, first with body radio surgery in the Western hemisphere, a huge experience, forty thousand patients treated

over decades. My name is doctor Liederman. Here for you we'll be right back.

Speaker 10

It's Johnny Braggs talking prostate cancer. Twenty years ago. I came to doctor Liederman with cancer. It was serious. My stepfather died days after prostate surgery. My uncle never recovered from prostate surgery. I came to doctor Leederman with prostate cancer and high PSA. Doctor Leederman explained all options, shared his and comparison results. I trusted doctor Leederman twenty years ago. Today I trust doctor Leederman even more. My prostate cancer is gone, my PSA is zero, my quality of life

is great. You can trust doctor Leederman too, like me for over twenty years, Call doctor Leederman for prostate cancer. Two on two choices. That's two on two choices, thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Street in Manhattan. Most insurance, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Leederman two and two choices.

Speaker 3

It's doctor Liederman with Calvin West singing and writing about his cancer treatment.

Speaker 11

Cats and my homeless upside at the radio surgery.

Speaker 4

Well, we got choices.

Speaker 7

I'm so glad that we do.

Speaker 5

You wanna thank Dodd Lenomman for the twices for.

Speaker 7

Me and you.

Speaker 4

Heliot Jakatz.

Speaker 11

It's my counting for two three wells, no more pay read your granddaddy?

Speaker 5

Is such a free?

Speaker 3

Can't your treatment? Called doctor Liederman? Two and two choices, two and two choices called doctor Liederman.

Speaker 6

Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the w o R Studios in the hearts of New York City.

Speaker 5

We're just a few.

Speaker 6

Steps the radio surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman the leading cancer expert treat prostate cancer not invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere with body radiosurgery. You can also call doctor Liderman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD.

Speaker 5

Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back.

Speaker 7

We are back.

Speaker 3

I want to talk about a fifty four year old woman. She's widowed, she has three children. She has a sarcoma of her thigh. So what is this sarcoma. Sarcomas are cancers of the connective tissue, like of the muscles, the bones, the fat, the ligaments, the tendons, and she has a sarcoma of her thigh. And she went to one of the biggest hospitals in the Five Burls. She had surgery. They cut on her thigh. They moved much of her thigh, believe it or not. Then she had standard radiation and

she came to me. She had a sarcoma of the left thigh. She had an incision and radical surgery and she had radiation to that area. She had recurrent cancer in the lung and in the kidney and in the leg. She was sent for chemo, but she just did not want to have chemo. She has pain in the legs, has a huge mass there. She came with pain for six months and she was seen by doctors who wanted to give her chemo. That's all they had to do. There was also cancer in the lungs, so was stage four.

Her weigh is one hundred pounds, same as a couple of years ago. She's four foot eight. She's a smoker. And you know what I told her, You don't have to guess about that. And well, I saw her and examined her. She had a ten centimeter mass in the left lateral thigh.

Speaker 7

There was an.

Speaker 3

Incision site and the cancer just came back to that same area, so he asked to stage her up. We got scans of her thigh, scans of her body, and she just was totally adamant against chemotherapy as well, because chemo for this disease, in fact, for many diseases, just does not work very well. And so she came to me with cancer and the thigh. We staged her up. We found cancer and the lung cancer and the kidney,

and this is the work we do. She was treated her several years ago and amazingly, actually for us, it's pretty normal. They've mass in the kidney and the lung and the thigh went away, and in fact, for the last year she had no cancer. Now she's back again to get checked up. And this is the work we do. We staged her up and found the cancer, we treated in the lung and the kidney and the leg are gone, and she is happy about her work.

Speaker 7

This is what we do.

Speaker 3

Every day. She had stage four cancer. With chemo, she most likely would have had chemo every week or every two weeks for the years since I treated her, and with us we're able to treat with high success, and that's why so many people like radio surgery. It's another reason you can live your life. You can have a few treatments and do what you want, whether you want to go to Timbuctoo or China or a golonification, or

be with your family or work. This is what she wants to do, is to have quality time, not getting chemo every week or every two weeks and convalescing from the chemo and a chemo again and again and again. She's just so upset about the idea of chemo and so happy about radio surgery. She tell her that radio surgery to the leg and the lung and the kidney with no side effects. She's ambulatory, she's functional with stage four cancer, and years later she's back here with good

results from the sites we treated. And this is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. I just want to take a minute to introduce myself. My name is doctor Gil Liederman, and I like to do that because so many people are giving advice, even in hospitals and offices. It's often not a doctor or who you think. It is something you don't even know who it is, so I just want to introduce myself so she at least know who's on the other side of this radio or a computer or her phone, or

however you're listening. My name is doctor Gil Liederman. I was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa. Went to public school University, MD at twenty five. Is my brother Ted MD at twenty five Doctor Ted Leaderman illustrious doctor and also like Aril Leaderman, doctor Ariel Leaderman, MD at twenty five.

There's three Leaderman's mds, all at twenty five. Aril Leaderman's fantastic doctor, board certified, trained major institutions across the country, and is here seeing new and recurrent cancers, patients with new or recurring cancers, or patients who want advice. He's loved by his patients and their family.

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And the staff.

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And he's meticulous and methodical and always striving and doing the right thing for his patients and caring, caring, caring, caring. He's compassionate and caring, board certified. I after MD at twenty five, went onto Euros of Chicago trained internal medicine

for three years, board certified. They went into Harvard Medical School trained prestigious Dana farvardt Harvard Medical School treated cancer patients and remained on the staff then at Harvard Medical School Joint Center for Radiation Therapy, trained for years, actually three more years, treated thousands of patients, also board certified. The only Harvard trained triple Board certified radiation doctor in New York and one of the few in the world.

Here for you at thirteen eighty four Broadway, seeing patients suspicious about having cancer or want to get checked up. Maybe you want to know if there's something in the breast, or you have a PSA you don't even know what your PSA is, or you have an ad AM mammogram or a colonoscopy. These are things that should be done routinely. So maybe you're in category one. You want to get checked out. Category two. People with newly diagnosed cancers. They

want to get the right thing. They don't want to lose their kidney or their breast, or their lung or their prostate unnecessarily, don't have radical surgery or a chemo if it's not going to help, And they want to get a fresh second opinion. They want to get an opinion from a door with a huge experience of forty thousand patients treated over decades, and this is the work we do in the third category. So first category is you're suspicious about having cancer. Second is you're newly diagnosed

with cancer, and third is you have cancer. You're getting treatment and it's just not going your way. You're not getting stronger, you're not getting better, the cancer's not going away. Doctor wants to give you a different surge or a different chemo again and again and again. Well, when they're starting to give you a different chemo again and again and again, that means the last chemos didn't work. They say, oh,

we have a new one that's so fantastic. Well, if the new and so fantastic, why didn't they give it to you before? And often when you get another chemo or different chemo, often the first chemo makes the cancer understand and become more resistant. And there's something called cross resistance where if you're resistant, if your cancer is resistant to one chemo, it's often resistant to another and another

and another chemo. That's another reason why people come here to get this straight information streat information about cancer options. And we can send you a booklet and DVD about our work. If you want, you can call now or tonight or any time you want at two and two choices two and two two four six forty two thirty seven, two and two two four six forty two thirty seven

calls if you want a booklet. We're right in the heart of New York City, close to Penn Station and Grand Central and Port Authority and Macy's in Times Square and Brian Park. There's more than a half a million people every day in our neighborhood, so it's easy to be here. And if you're not here, probably have a friend or neighbor or family member who can pick up

a package of information and DVD. Lots of radio listeners come and get two packages, one for themselves and one for their friend or family.

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Who needs it even more.

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And we appreciate radio listeners because radio listeners help save lives. And I know that because I speak to every patient I have, and I talk to the person, how you get here, what kind of work you do, what are you doing, what's happened to you up to now?

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I talk and learn.

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Some patients are so surprised as doctor Liederman was seeing him, but that's what we do. We're so different than most places where he may not even see a doctor. If you do, it might be for two minutes to shake hands and get a bill. Here you see the real doctor. This is what we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. And I want to talk about an incredible cases. A seventy seven year old man. He's from Nigeria, Africa. He's a black man. He has prostate cancer. He came

with stage four cancer. He was diagnosed with a PSA of a thousand. Remember a PSA should be four or less. His PSA was a thousand. He had a super scan bone scan, super scan which showed cancer and so many bones. He did a biops. He's showing a Gleason nine cancer. He was elsewhere at super duper General. They gave him loop run and cassidics and it just was not working. He had nodules in the lung. His biops he showed Gleason. Gleason is how the cancer looks under the microscope. People ask,

how do you get a Gleason. We you have to get a biopsy to get a Gleason. So Gleason's not a blood test. Gleason is the original biopsy of the prostate cancer. So his original biopster was Gleason nine. He had stage four cancer. He had all his blood counts were low, probably because the cancer was eating through the bone marrow. His biopsy showed cancer around the nerves long mets, had a nodule and the lung and he was very knee because hemoglobe and in his metica was eight and

twenty six. So he was in bad shape with diffuse pain. He even went to a hospital. They put the put him in the hospital. They didn't do anything, but they put him in the hospital, and say why do they do that? Well, usually the answers are coming out, Well, they made a lot of money, but they didn't help him. You're still in pain when I saw him, and his PSA was still equally high, so the stay in the hospital did not help. He worked in industry in real estate.

He was married. He has three children who's born in Nigeria. His prostate was huge, and he had pain in the spine, especially in the lumbar spine, the right hip and left humors and he had stage four cancers urinating every night. So what do we do, Well, we're helping with his urine number one, we're helping him with his pain, and then we treated him We treated him to the painful areas and made the pain go away, and his pain has now gone away. When he came to me, it

was an intractable, excruciating pain and it went away. And that's what happens to most people who come here with cancer pain. They're able to help, which is so different than chemo, which only works temporarily for most diseases, and then the cancer comes right back and the pain comes right back, or medicines pain medicines, pain medicines don't treat the cancer. Radiosurgery allows us to treat the cancer, which

relieves the pain at the same time. And doesn't make sense that you're treating the cancer that's causing the pain. You make the cancer go away, which makes the pain go away usually, so you're doing two good things at the same time with radio surgery, treating the cancer with a high success rate and making the pain go away when the cancer goes away. And this is what we do every day. And one of the most dramatic things about this person. While I was treating him, he lost

his hearing. I used to say, Hi, how are you, and he walked on the hall and he wouldn't speak to me at first, I thought he was ignoring me, but then it became clear he lost all his hearing and he didn't know what to do. It was really upset, and so we staged him up and found in fact that the cancer of the prostate had eaten through the

bones of his skull, destroying his hearing. And luckily he was here with us, and luckily we investigated it, and luckily we were able to treat his ears simultaneously and regain restore his hearing, and his hearing is now normal. He even went to hearing doctors. No one knew what was the cause of his hearing loss until he came here, and we found that the cancer even through the temporal

bones bones in the skull. We treated those bones, relieve the cancer, relieve the pain, relieve the hearing loss, and so now the pain is gone, the hearing has been totally restored. I can talk to him just like I'm talking to you, and he hears perfectly. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty

four Broadway. I'm going to tell you one more secret, and that is that we're here live on the radio, and that means you can call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. We're live on the radio from now till noon and then again from one to two. And remember we're every night on WOR from midnight to one and so many people like to go to sleep with doctor Liederman and wake up with doctor

Liederman and go to work with doctor Liederman. Around the world. We have patients in India and China and Bangladesh, England who tuned us in on the computer. Tune us in on your smartphone and you can too. So every night we're on WR at midnight in New York time, and then we're also on Saturdays from eleven am to noon, from one to two, three to four, and five to six every Saturday, and then again Sundays from eleven to

twelve and one to two. So again every midnight on WR, Saturdays, eleven to noon, one to two pm, three to four pm, five to six pm, all in the morning and afternoon on Saturdays and WR and then Sundays now till noon and one till two my nimes, Doctor Liederman, We'll be right back.

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Numbers mean much to me because of prostate cancer. I'm Johnny Bragg's the number two from my stepfather who died of prostate cancer and my uncle who suffered so much after prostate cancer surgery. The number fifteen fifteen years since doctor lead him in successful treatment of my prostate cancer zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor Liederman's successful prostate cancer treatment. What every man wants The numbers one, two, three,

four important for every man with prostate cancer. One getting the most successful treatment. Two avoiding radical robotic surgery, three keeping sexual function, four maintaining urinary control. Call my doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices to consider his prostate cancer treatment for you. Most insurances Medicare and Medicaid accepted. Thirteen eighty four, Broadway at thirty eighth Call two on two choices for prostate cancer treatment. Call

doctor Liederman two one two choices. I'm glad I did. You'll be number one with doctor.

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Leiderman, remembering Jimmy Carter, thirty ninth president living to one hundred. First president treated with radiosurgery. Doctor Liderman first to perform body radio surgery in America.

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First and first.

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Why a president chooses radiosurgery for cancer treatment? Same reason as our pace, well tolerated, highly effective, where we attack cancer outpatient proven over decades, no cutting, no bleeding. Learn from doctor Leederman. First with body radio surgery. Thousands treated, high success and high quality of life. Commonly meet doctor Leiderman called two and two choices. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Thirteen eighty four Broadway in Manhattan. Learn what President Carter knew.

Call doctor Leederman two and two choices, two and two choices. Doctor Liederman believes you're president of your body. For newer recurrent cancers, call doctor Leederman two and two choices, two and two choices. First President and first physician, Doctor Leederman.

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Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the w R Studios in the hearts of.

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New York City.

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Were just a few steps from the Radio Surgery New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Leiderman the leading cancer expert treat prostate cancer.

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Basically, he was the first in.

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New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere with body radiosurgery. You can also call doctor Liederman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD.

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Hey doctor Liederman, we're back.

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We are back.

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I want to talk about a woman that came to me five years ago. Sixty nine year old woman born in Bari, Italy, Italy Peninsula. Bari's on the east coast on the Adriatic Sea. She was sixty nine years old. She had two children. She came with her sister. She had a motor vehicle accident, she had a lung nodule. She had a cat scan and a pet scan. I called the radiologist and the doctor felt it was most likely a cancer.

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When the cat scan.

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Looks at pictures, so it's a series of pictures through an area of the body. A pet scan does that, plus it injects a radioactive sugar. So cancer usually likes to eat and eat anything we eat, a steak or an ice cream cone or anything. Sugar is easily to inject. But there's an old that all cancer like sugar and shouldn't need sugar. Not true, It is not true. But anyway, the pet scan was positive, that cat scan was positive,

and I spoke to her. She was never a smoker, and she was never around smoking, and there's more and more lung cancers occurring in non smokers with no exposure. She weighed one hundred and forty seven pounds. She's four foot eleven. Everything was fine. She was seen by a lung doctor wanted to cut out her lung in that area. She had never had colonoscopies. I've advised her to do that.

She had had PEP singers and mammograms and well, this pet scan showed a two point six centimeter lesion and this is what she has, and she was aware of that. I met with her. We spoke about all the options. She had seen surgeons. She declined surgery and guess what she walked away from me. Walked away from me five years ago. She walked away, did not want to be treated. And then guess who walked in this week and guess what happened. The cancer is growing. We got a new

scan of her. Luckily the cancer had not traveled. It's still treatable with radio surgery. She's adamant against surgery. She's adamant against chemotherapy. We see so many people with lung cancer who do not want to have part of their lung removed. If you remove part of your lung. In general, the patients I've seen have less good exercise capacity. I know patients who used to walk upstairs couldn't walk upstairs after their lung was removed or part of their lung

was removed. She was just adamant against surgery, adamant against chemo, which usually is not used as instant, and wanted radio surgeon. She remembered me for five years. I did not see her again. She never she never called, she never came in. Five years later, she walked in with her son, wanting to have radiosurgery as soon as possible, so she waited five years. She wanted to be treated. We staged r up,

we did cancer markers, we had blood. Has examined her, and this is the work that we do every day, first in New York, first in America, first in the Western Hemisphere. With forty thousand patients treated, more than anywhere else, it's easy to see why people come here, and many people come back. Sometimes they don't decide immediately. This woman took five years to decide, and lucky for her, the cancer was growing, but it didn't travel to other organs.

Lucky for her, and that's what we're treating right now. We're treating her. We expect a ninety percent success rate. We expect the tumor to go away, and of course we'll be doing imaging scans, physical exams, blood tests to make sure it goes away. We've treated so many people with radio surgery like her. Some people, most people want

to be treated immediately. She just wanted to wait. I guess she maybe didn't trust me or whatever, and it took her five years to develop a trust and she came back and.

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Just having treatment. Now.

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This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of.

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New York City.

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And we'll talking about a seventy two year old when she looks like a fifty two. She's widowed, she has two children. She has a son and daughter. She lives in Maryland and her son is in Pennsylvania. She had a baso cell cancer on the face, had Moe's surgery, and Moe's is a kind of radical surgery where they remove the skin cancer and all the tissues around it. Often is very deforming. And now she has a cancer on the scalp, a squamous carcinoma. Then in North Carolina that's where she lives,

North Carolina, and North Carolina did a biopsy. North Carolina, they want to do Moe's surgery on her scalp. She didn't like it on her face and she just did not want any more moss surgery. She wanted no cutting and no bleeding. And she learned about us. Her son lives in Pennsylvania and works in New York and heard about us through listening.

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Was like you.

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And she came to us last year and we treated her and well, now the cancer's gone. I examined her and there's no evidence of cancer. It was a mass on the scalp. It was irregular, it was infiltrative. And now that area is all clean as a whistle. And so many skin cancers. You heard in the show a few minutes ago a guy who had a skin cancer on his face and he just didn't want to be deformed like his friend. He said had a melon boller,

looked like a melon baller went after his skin. And so many people who know better check us out for skin cancer. Sad to say, most skin cancers are diagnosed by a dermatologists, almost all of them are, and dermatologists are surgeons. And it seems like most dermatologists send the patient for Moe's surgery, which is deforming often, and this patient had it once on their face. It's like President Bush said, fool me once, fool me twice. His patient did not want to be fooled twice. So if you

have a skin cancer, a suspicious leasion, you're welcome. Will come in. If you have a biopsy proven cancer, come in. Even if it's not biopsy proven. You want to get checked out, give us a chance to call us up, or we can send you a package of information. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. For the package in DVD, there was no charge, so give us a call at two and two choices. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid who treated thousands of skin cancers non invasively, with no

cutting and no bleeding. If ibout a man who's now, let me see how old he is. He's ninety six, born in nineteen twenty nine, ninety six years old, and I've been seeing him for more than a decade. He had three skin cancers on his face, one on his forehead. One of his nose, one of his cheek, all treated with big success. We treated his skin cancer and his nose recently, and in between he had a prostate cancer. So he's had at least five skin cancers and a

prostate cancer, all or in remission. He's doing well and he lives in the South end of New Jersey, so it's a big commute for a ninety six year old. Why does he come Why does he make a trip from Tom's River at age ninety six? Because he trusts, He trusts, he knows me. He comes in. He even doesn't make an announcement, he just comes in. He's well known to me and the staff. He loves it here. He usually takes a stack of business cards and he gives it to other people who are suffering. He's like

a radio listener, but even more so. He's had our treatment on the face, the ear, the nose, the cheek, the forehead, had prostate cancer. Has a huge experience with us. He's now in remission, doing great, and this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. Rhyme Doctor Liederman. Who want more information, you can check our website which is R S n y dot org r s n y dot org. If you have a question, you can email me. My email is Gail gil at

r s n y dot org. It's always best to come in person for your medical questions, so call us two and two choices two and two two four six forty two thirty seven to make an appointment.

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Thirty eighty four Broadway.

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Ext Thanks for tuning in to the Radio Surgery Hour with doctor Gil Riderman and myself. If you have questions before next week's show, or want a free informative booklet and DVD, just contact doctor Liederman at two one two choices. That's two one two two four six four two three seven. That's two one two two four six four two three seven.

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For cancer treatment, most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York, First for you with body radiosurgery, Doctor Liderman hits your cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers from head to toe. Cancer treatment with possibly a second

chance for you. Meet doctor Leaderman to hit the cancer. He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified Radiation oncologist. Call two one two choices, to one two choices to meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Free booklet DVD two super convenient Broadway in thirty eighth in Manhattan, Meet doctor Liederman to hit your cancer. Call two one two choices two one two choices.

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Did you know that you've got to choices?

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That there can.

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Be a bad way?

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Did you know that you've got choices?

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Conductor?

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They don't mean today? To want to choices is a much bad way to want too choices? Conductor leader mean today. Did you know that you've got choices? That there can.

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Be a bad way?

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Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor thea doer me today? To want to choices a much bad way to want too choices?

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Conductor leader mean today, Doctor Leaderman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four, Broadway.

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The preceding a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed

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