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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 even if chemo radiation or surgery didn't work or isn't tolerated. Goals are your best results and quality of life. Meet doctor Liderman 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. Free book with 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.
It's doctor Leederman with Carrie Stubbs, who sings and writes about his cancer treatment.
Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight. Cataplane hop a train, don't has a tait. Call to onto 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 chemoparrapy. 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 the address my cancer had been set straight, Called to on two choices for an Appointment's mate the tleeder Men's top right.
For more information about innovation of 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 Leiderman two and two choices.
Welcome everybody. 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 answering your questions. I'm Rob Redstone, broadcasting from the WR Studios in the heart of New York City, and now please welcome doctor Leaderman.
Thank you Rob, and thank you No and thank you for tuning in today and every day. We're on the radio every day to educate. My name's doctor Liederman. I'll be introducing myself in a few mans and that's every day we talk about patience human beings. It's like you and me, and your neighbors and your friends and your family who sometimes have a big problem. Sometimes they come in just for a checkup. Many people come here for
a checkup. They don't know if they have breast cancer or prostate cancer, lung cancer, liver cancer, why they're losing weight, or why they have bleeding, or why they have a lump somewhere, or why their voices changed, or why they have headaches. There's many reasons people come to get checked out. So one reason people come is to get checked out. And I see people checked out all the time, and many people come and we get checked them out and
nothing's wrong, and we celebrate. We're very happy. And sometime people come and we check them out and we find a cancer, and often we find it early, earlier than we would normally have found it, earlier than they would have found it because they really often weren't getting care, or the doctor wasn't doing testing, or the doctors said they were too old or too young, or do this or do that, and they were well, basically weren't satisfied. And that's why so many people come here, because they're
not satisfied with the medical care, what's going on. They want a fresh second opinion. Of course, we see people who are diagnosed with cancer, newly diagnosed cancer, that's the second category, who want to get on the best possible track that pleases them and allows them to understand what's going on. And then there's a third group of people who have had cancer and they've had treatment and they're
just not satisfied. The cancer's not going away, or the side effects are too much, or they've had lots of chemotherapy which is causing lots of side effects where there's weakness or numbness and pain in the hands, and feet, or lowering of the blood councers, so many reasons. People come here who've had cancer and they're not satisfied with the care that's going on. So those are the three
big categories. People come here, and people listen to the program because they want to hear what happens to those people who come here to get checked out. And that's what we talk about every day. We're not selling anything. We're not asking to send money or stamps or buy concoctions. Far from it. We're just trying to educate. And if you're interested, we have literature to send you. We have
lots of literature DVDs to send you. Or if you're really enthusiastic and you're coming into Manhattan, right in the heart of midtown Manhattan by Times Square and Macy's and Port Authority and Penn Station and Grand Central and Bryant Park, right in the middle is Regulster to New York. And there's more than a half a million people that come into our neighborhood every day. So you or your loved ones maybe coming in and you may want to stop
by and pick up a package of information. And often people come and get a package for themselves and a package for their loved one, or sometimes even get a package for the person down the street who they know is suffering. They barely know them, that they heard through the rumor mill that they may have cancer and they're not doing well and they're suffering, and they want a fresh second opinion. So listeners save lives. And how can you save lives? Well, you can listen and learn, you
can hear about options. You can then pass that information on. That's how listeners save lives. And I know that listeners save lives. I know that you have the ability to save lives just by listening and speaking up and not being bachelor. If you've got a restaurant or a grocery at work and someone's talking about oh, he or she's got a cancer and they're not doing well, you may pat him on the shoulder and say, hey, you may
want to see doctor Liederman. And so many of our patients, so many, I would say, the average person who comes he has been told by three separate friends or neighbors, hey, it's time to go see doctor Liederman. So it's very common that listeners save lives, and you too can save lives just by passing on the word or say hey, why don't you tune in to doctor Liederman's radio show, or why don't you take this package of information? Or why don't you watch his DVD. There's so many ways
you can save lives. And I want to talk about something special today, and that is that I want to talk about Jimmy Carter in his hundredth birthday, number one. He recently celebrated his one hundred birthday and he died. He died at age hundred, so he was the longest living president. He lived longer than any other president, which is amazing by it South and presidents get VIP care,
as you can imagine. Remember when President Obama had a call or something and he went to Andrews Air Force Base or one of the hospitals around that area, and in thirty minutes, I think was in twenty minutes, they did and dosket me. They looked down his throat, they did a cat scan to tell him, oh, you just have a sore throat. So yeah, it seems that presidents get VIP care, and we want our patients to know that they too can get VIP care. And I want
to talk about Jimmy Carter for a minute. Who certainly had the access to VIP care. As you probably know, had cancer and cancer travel to his brain nearly a decade ago. And usually when cancer travels to the brain, the prognosis is grim. It could be grim. Sometimes people live days or weeks or months, and Jimmy Carter lived nearly a decade. So it was monumental that he lived so long and really so well for those period of time.
And I remember seeing him at different events, including even his wife's funeral, who preceded him sad to say in death. So what's so special about Jimmy Carter and the cancer that travel to Jimmy Carter's brain. Well, he not only was the longest living president, but what helped him get to be the longest living president. Well that was radio surgery. Yeah, Jimmy Carter is the first and the best of my knowledge, the only president ever to have radio surgery. So what
is radio surgery. Radio surgery is not surgery. Radio surgery is not cutting, radio surgery is not bleeding. Radio surgery is nothing except its end point treatment. That's monumental. And you're now listening to the doctor that first brought body radio surgery to the Western hemisphere. Decades ago, who first brought brain radio surgery to New York decades ago, been involved in radio surgery since nineteen eighty six, so the longest track record, the most experienced, and that's why so
many people come here. So I want to acknowledge that, yes, Jimmy Carter, President Carter had cancer the brain nearly a decade ago. That President Carter was the first president to have radio surgery, and he did so well. So well he had radio surgery, he had other treatments as well, we should acknowledge that, and the two together made him, I believe, able to survive and prosper to one hundred and hats off to Jimmy Carter, and many people love him.
Many people have other feelings about him, but anyway, he was said to be a man of great humility and he did what he believed was best. Whether that was it or not, who knows. I'm not judging him. I'm just talking about medical facts. That's what this program is about. Medical facts and medical issues. And why would a president, Why would a president choose radio surgery? And how can you have care presidential care? How can you have the
same kind of care a president have? Well? Number One you can come to doctor Lederman thirty eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, or the home of radio surgery. So why would someone like Jimmy Carter or anyone or you or me or anyone choose radio surgery. Well, number one, he probably didn't want to have his brain opened up and his head opened up, that might might say, like
any patient who comes to us. So many patients do not want to have radical surgery, whether us for the brain or the breast, or the lung, or the pancreas, or the liver, or the bladder or the prostate. And losing part of the body is often devastating. I've seen people who lose their eyes and ears and part of their mouth. Women commonly lose their breast. When I came to New York, ninety seven percent of women who had breast cancer were losing their breast at the biggest, super
duper hospitals. And yet in my practice this is now forty years later, ninety percent of women keep their breast and often women nowadays don't even have lumpectomies or surgeries on the breast. So many women you might be surprised that so many women just do not want their breast operated on or deformed or shortened or taken away. And
I can tell you that's true. Lung cancer. So many lung cancers, Well, if a surgeont ruse part of the lung, well, God gave you your lungs to breathe, and if you move part of your lung, then you're going to breathe less well. And I've seen people who've had surgery for lung cancer. They used to be fully functional. Now they can't go up and down the steps to go at
home or to the subway or shopping. It could be so devastating or or recently, I saw a man who had cancer in the pancreas and he went and had a super duper surgery called Whippall one of the biggest hospitals in New York, and the cancer came right back in the same area, which is pretty common. And the same is true and deliver. So many people I see have had kidney cancer that they have their kidney removed
and they've lost half their kidney. Now, one thing about losing half your kidney is maybe some people don't need both kidneys. That's true, but often people that have one kidney cancer often have a second kidney cancer, and so by having the surgeon removed the first kidney, you've already diminished your capacity by a fifty percent. Whereas that same person could come to doctor Liederman Radioster to New York. They're twenty four Broadway and have non invasive treatment for
that kidney cancer and save the kidney. So it's such a big difference. And our success rate is so high for primary cancers, primary kidney cancers, or even metastatic kidney cancers. Doctor Ariel Liederman here at Radioster New York presented a paper showing metastatic kidney cancer the lung with a ninety
four percent success rate stage four. That we're able to attack the cancer kidney cancer lung with high success, and we do that every day with different kinds of cancers, either primary lung cancers or cancers that are metastatic that have traveled. And then about bladder cancers, well, think about removing your bladder if you have bladder cancer, may mean that you'll never urinate the same in fact, it does mean that, and for a man, it means you'll never
have sexual function. For a women who will alter her life tremendously for the rest of her life. And so often, so often we see that the surgeon just does not tell the patient, Hey, I can remove your bladder if you want, or you can go see doctor Liederman and talk about non invasive treatment which is highly successful with no cutting and no bleeding and no removal of the bladder and no plastic bigs on your side and no tubes. And this is the word we've been doing for decades.
High success for bladder cancers. Then of course prostate cancers, which will be talking about in a few minutes, with high success avoiding radical and robotic surgery. We know that with radical and robotic surgery for prostate most men ninety seven percent of men have difficulties or no erections. Eighty percent have leaky to the urine. Most men have shortening of the penis because when they move the prostate, they also are removing the urethra, which is a tube that
goes through the prostate to pass urine. So the surgeon does not only remove the prostate, but also removes the urethra and shortens the penis. And also when they remove the prostate, the nerves get damaged. That's why men have so much difficulty with erections and with urinary control. So there's lots of information to talk about. Hats off to President Carter lived to be one hundred, had radiosurgery, lived
nearly ten years after radio surgery for cancer. Traveled to the brain stage for cancer, had a manu mental course, a monumental life, went to Naval Academy, worked on some nuclear submarines with Ricover was governor, was president at a loving family. It was known as a very humane, loving man now gone, but we'll remember him forever for what he was and for what he did. The first president ever to have radio surgery in history. My name is doctor Liederman. Will be right back.
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 two and two choices.
It's doctor Liederman with guy talking about skin cancer treatment options.
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 caring. I think I'm kind of handsome. I wanted to keep it that way.
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 are letdown the primrose path to have radic homs surgery for their skin cancer. Why are you different.
From hearing what you report? You know, hey, you don't need to get radical deforming. Come and see what we can. I have a lot of trust in what I've seen and what I heard, and the treatments were very simple.
If Miss America comes up to right now, what would she think about the results of your skin.
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 what you should do.
Any regrets, not at all. Call doctor Liederman at two and two Choices, thirteen eighty four Broadway. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted.
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the WR Studios in the hearts of New York City, were just a few steps 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 Liderman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey doctor Leader, we're back.
We're back. That man who just talked about his skin cancer, he's actually now had two skin cancers on his face, one years ago, one year or so ago. On his face. We're very prominent places on his face. He just did not want to be deformed by radical surgery. Radical surgery is called MOS where they kind of excavate the area and then they try to patch it up, one of whom was on his forehead, one was on his nose. He just did not want to have deformity on his body.
And since he recorded that those words, he actually had a third skin cancer on his back and he came for treatment for that too. So he's doing great. He wants to come back and do a new recording to talk about all three cancers, and if I've invited him back to do that. We treat so many skin cancers why because surgery, again is so deforming, especially on the face.
Most skin cancers are in sun exposed areas, so the ear, the nose, the eyes, the mouth, the face, also hands and feet, and so many people just do not want to have MOS surgery, which is an excavation Moses Mohs Moe surgery. There's three million skin cancers a year in America, so lots. If you talk about prostate cancers just as a proportionality, there's about two hundred thousand men with prostate cancer, but there's three million Americans with skin cancers a year,
so lots of skin cancers. And sad to say, most people get sent for surgery. Dermatologists are really surgeons of the skin, and they send or do radical surgery on the skin. That's their job to cut and sometimes sad to say, they don't say, hey, we can cut off part of your nose or eye, or ear or mouth. And if you call and get our booklet about skin cancer, you'll see examples of those and examples of our work. Or you can go to doctor Liederman. Do you want
to be cut up? Or you want to have doctor Liederman with no cutting and no bleeding with high success or success about ninety five percent, with non invasive treat materiment that doesn't touch your body, no cutting, no bleeding, no surgery, no repair jobs, no patchwork. So different than
mos or radical surgery. And that's what this gentleman, he's a national champion athlete was talking about and he's really devoted to our work and we have a great relationship, and that's why he's coming back to talk about his third skin cancer. This is the work we do every day. At thirteen eighty four Broadway. A look a man who's a New York City fireman. He's seventy nine years old. He's married, has three children. He's had atrifibrillation, has thyroid
is a positive family history. His father had stage four prostate cancer, which is a fatal cancer. He's been on twenty two different supplements and vitamins. Okay, twenty two. And I have so many patients they think, oh, if you take these concoctions or vitamins or supplements, they're going to help you. Well, they don't really help help anybody, except in general the drug company that's selling them to you. If you're taking all these supplements, you can come in
and we can talk about that. He was taking twenty two different supplements and vitamins, and yet he had one of the most aggressive cancers. So he came to me. He had a PSA that was around one or two jumped to five. He had a biopsy. The biops who was Gleason nine cancer. So in the old days, they would do biopsies and say hey, you have cancer or not yes or no cancer. And Gleason Kimeron said, hey, some cancers are aggressive and some are not aggressive. And he made a scale from two to ten. Now, why
is it two to ten. Well, it's actually in two different areas. So one plus one equals two is the best you can have. Five plus five equals ten the worst you can have. And he had a Gleason nine cancer stage T three, so a very big, hard rock hard prostate and a huge mass and a very aggressive cancer. Remember his father had prostate cancer. Now, for you have a first degree relative with cancer, prostate cancer and you get prostate cancer, the death rate goes up by seventy
two percent. So you're talking about a very risky situation for this man. He's a fireman, he's an outstanding citizen. He's a loving family and wife and children and grandchildren. I've seen him on the street on weekends buying goodies for his grandchildren. And years ago, years ago, he came to us with his Gleason nine T three prostay cancer with twenty two concoctions. I examined him. He was in
a heart disease on de Jockson. He's on blood thinner's for h fibrillation, he's on nitrobolistener for chest pain, and he wanted our treatment. Why did he want our treatment because with surgery for Gleason nine, cancer success is about twenty two percent, it's very very low. And with us, the majority of the men we treat our cancer free. It's a huge different there's huge differences in result. Else, there's huge differences in treatment. Some people say, oh, I'm
just going to go to a local place. It's so convenient. That's like the kiss of death. To do something for convenience, in my view, is a kiss of death. I in my view, he should do things that give you the best chance to be cancer free. And with us, unlike anywhere else, unlike anywhere else, we sat down, we showed him the data. We showed him statistics and major centers and major doctors across the country with different methods of surgery and radiation and other treatments, and he saw that
our results are superior. And that's why he came years ago for treatment. Even though he had a positive family history, and even though he had heart disease, even though he's seventy nine. He wants to live, he wants to have a good life, and why not. He deserves that. And we treated him years ago, and now his PSA is zero.
And how does a man know and their loved ones, how does a man and the loved ones know if the cancer is gone, If the prostate cancer's gone, well, the PSA should go down to zero by itself, not with hormones other artifactual things, by itself after treatment and stay there for the rest of one's life. And his PSA has been zero now for years. He's doing great. He's fully active, he's doing everything that he wants. His
quality of life is excellent. He never had radical surgery, no robotic surgery, no radical surgery, and now cancer free, PSA zero, living the life at seventy nine with his family, has loved ones. And he comes and sees me a couple times a year to get checked out. And he was just here this past week. PSA is zero. And this is the work we like. This is the work we do. That's why so many men, nine thousand men, probably more than anywhere else, have come for prostate cancer
treatment with a single physician. This is the work we do every day. I'm talking another man who had a Stage T three prostate cancer. He came eight years ago. He was born in Jamaica as a black man. I said, because of the black community, one and six black men get prostate cancer. You think about numbers huge, One in twenty three will die of prostate cancer. And he had a stage T three prostate cancer and the PSA with high velocity. What is high psa velocity? What means that
the PSA goes up quickly. So his PSA went up from six to twelve just within a short period of time. He had biopsies. He had several biopsies. The first one did not show cancer. He had a repeated showed a glease in six cancer. He's sixty three years old. He's married with two children. He came with his friend. And he also has a very strong family history. I told you just a minute ago, if you have a family history of prostate cancer, the risk of dying he is
about seventy two percent higher. Well, this man has a brother and a father with prostate cancer, so very high risk. He has a high PSA velocity. He's a urination is okay. I used to work over time he's now retired. His weight as one eighty. It's staying at one eighty. I was hospitalized for an infected prostate. He went elsewhere in one of the big hospitals. He had an infection, but that all cleared up. He worked for the MTA. I
examined them. A huge cancer, treated years ago, and now his PSA is zero, doing great fully, intact, living the life. His sexual life works, as urinary life works. His quality of life is great. And this is how we like our patients to be. This is the work that we do every day at thirtyenty four Broadway. We're located right in the heart of New York City. It's so easy
to get to us. There's subways, buses, trains. The subways that get to us one, two, three, four, five, six, A, CE, N QRBDFMS and seven and S and almost all the buses. And there's thousands of inner city buses that come to Port Authority, and all the trains that come to Grand Central and Penn Station, all walking distance from our office. We made our office to be accessible to you. Also, we accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid, so we're easy or accessible.
This is the work we do we communicate, We talk about all the treatment options. You'll get our package of information if you wish in call actually even now or anytime you want. Our phone number is two and two choices. Even our phone number is easy, two and two choices. Can call to ask your question, or call to get a package information, or better yet, called to make an appointment. We don't do zoom because there's so many mistakes with zoom.
It's better to meet in person. Doctors and patients have known for hundreds of years it's better to meet in person. My name is doctor Liederman, Board certified actually triple board certified. Actually the only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation doctor in New York. Here for you, So give us a call it two and two choices two and two two four six forty two thirty seven, or go online. Our website is our SNY dot org. Our website is RSNY dot org and email. You can email me at Gilgil
that's my name, Gil at r SNY dot org. So again, if I email me a question Gil at r SNY dot org, we'll be right back.
It's Johnny Bragg's talking prostate cancer. Twenty years ago, I came to doctor Leederman with prostate cancer. It was serious. My stepfather died days after prostate surgery. My uncle never recovered from prostate surgery. I came to doctor Leiderman 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 two years. Call doctor Leederman for prostate cancer two on two choices. That's two one two choices. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Street in Manhattan. Most insurance, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Leederman two and two choices.
It's doctor Leederman with Calvin West singing and writing about his cancer treatment.
I had cancer and my home was a podca.
At the radio, Sarge, you read that.
We got choices. I'm so glad that you do. You want to thank doctor leader Man photo.
And you.
He'll get your cancer. It's f counting one two three, Well up, no pad, your brand that is so too free.
Were cancer treatment called doctor Leederman two and two choices, two and two choices called doctor Liederman.
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. Were just a few steps from the Radio Surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats 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 radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liederman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey doctor Liederman, we're back.
We're back. I want to talk about a woman, beautiful woman. She's eighty nine years old and she's had blood in the urine for years. She has difficulty urinating for years, and finally she's doctors. She's widowed, which has no children. She came with a very good friend. She's had blood in the year and blood every time she urinates. She had tests on several of the biggest super duper hospitals in New York City. She was found of a three
and a half centimeter mass in the bladder. She was seen by a primary doctor and then it was referred to a urologist and referred to another eurologist to undo surgery on her. The mass was three point three by two point three by two point three centimeters. She had an ultrasound. The ultrasound showed a different size. Different quality tests do different measurements because they measure things differently, so ultras on her mass was even bigger, three point six
by three by three point eight centimeters. There was no obvious spread on the testing at this outside hospital. A lot of people that have bladder cancer are smokers or has been around secondhand smoke. She never smoked. She never smoked. But she used to go out to Iowa, which is my home state, and she lived for thirty five years in Iowa. She went working in Iowa. She'd go from New York fly out to Iowa for thirty five years,
go once or twice a year back and forth. And she lived in an apartment house and she had people smoked like crazy in that apartment house in Iowa. So she lived in Iowa for thirty six years. She had conoscopy on the past, not recently. She has no control of the bladder. She has blood in the urine. Her bob movements are fine. She has some leg pain. She was told that the test elsewhere showed no spread of the cancer or proposed cancer. She has a mass. It
looks like a cancer. There's been no biopsy, so we discussed all the options. I asked the person, this nice lady, to have a cystoscopy, which is to look in the bladder, which is an easy test, and a great eurologist in New York City looked at in her immediately, actually without a weight, and saw this big mass. He felt it was most likely a cancer. And then the usual next step is to do a biopsy, which is a minor surgical procedure, and she just did not want that. We
did get testing on her. I got MRIs and I got a PET scan on her to prove whether or not this tumor was localized or spread if it spread. Obviously, cancers are the only things that spread on Benign tumors don't spread in general, or at least spread distantly, So we got an MRI. The abdomen and palvis. We've got a pet scan and sure enough, she had a mass in the lumbar spine. So she had a mass eating through the spine L two, the lateral segment or the left lateral segment of L two, and so she has
stage four cancer. In my view, she did not have a biops. She she did not want a byap. See. She actually came to me refusing all surgery. She just did not want to go through cutting or bleeding. She's so fearful. And there's many people like I talked about a few minutes ago, who just do not want to have radical surgery or any surgery. And yet with the cancer that traveled to the spine, the petskin was positive, there's a defect in the bone. The MRI was also
consistent with medicite cancer the spine. This is consistent most probably with metastatic stage four cancer. Without a biopsy, you cannot be one hundred percent sure, but I would say it's probably ninety nine percent sure. And she's just adamant, and she's just fearful of the cancer eating through the spine and wanted that spine treated. She wants the spine and the bladder treated. Why with a spine. She's not
want to have further pain. She believes the pain and the legs is from that cancer and the spine, and she wants to stop the bleeding. So this is the work we do. And the beautiful thing about radio surgery, it could be done for children or young adults, or adults or even somewhat older people like this eighty nine year old woman. Our oldest patient is one hundred and five who also actually had a mass in the bladder, and I treated her about ten years ago and the
bleeding stopped and she tolerated the treatment perfectly. So the cancer went away, the bleeding went away in a woman almost her age, one hundred and five verses eighty nine. And this is the work we do, So there's lots of options people learn about here. She went to several big eurologists at big hospitals, and no one talked to her about staging up to see if this mass had traveled.
They didn't do that, they didn't do any testing, they didn't talk about other treatments besides surgery, and she was just adamant against surgery. So this woman is going through treatment now and she's tolerating treatment well. She comes in gets her treatment and Scadado's home. And this is the work that we do every day. We try to find answers and options that suit each person's desire, rather than to force people into treatment that maybe some doctor thinks
his best. We talk about all the options. We talk about why some things might be best, or something might be worst, or what the differences are. Some people just don't want surgery. Some people don't want radiations, some people don't want chemo, some people don't want anything. Some people want everything, even want the twenty two concoctions, even though
we know it doesn't help. So people have their own ideas, and we try to respect everyone's wishes and desires and background and where they come from, and talk and communicate. Communication is the key. My name is doctor Liederman. I told you earlier I'm going to introduce myself, and I want to do that because so many people talk on the radio, and so many people say things, some of which we don't know where the heck it comes from.
And so many people nowadays are going to doctor's office and they don't even see the doctor, they don't even know who they're seeing. So many people don't wear a badge. You don't say if they're a nurse or a nurse practitioner or assistant or physician assistant, or a resident or an intern or a student, just so vague. And here we are very clear. We have signs up who we are a background, I talk about it on the radio.
We have business cards talking about Hey, this is an MD whose board certified, like doctor Ario Leiderman, who's so fantastic board certified MD, and we talk about him just a minute. I want to talk about myself first, just because I'm going chronologically. So I was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa. Went to public schools, University MD at twenty five, real doctor like my illustrious brother, doctor Ted Liederman two doctor Liederman's mds at twenty five real medical doctors.
And I went on to the University of Chicago trained internal medicine for three years, trained thousands of people with
medical conditions. Then went on to Harvard Medical School at the prestigious Dana Farber Cancers Too, whereas for years three years training and then it remained on the staff board certified, and then also at Harvard Medical School trained at the famous Joint Center for Radiation Therapy three more years board certified, the only Harvard trained, trip Board certified radiation doctor in New York, one to the few in the world. Here for you at thirty d four Broadway. If you wish,
doctor Ariel leader and my son is fantastic. He also was MD at twenty five from one of the most illustrious medical schools in America. There's actually three doctor Liederman's, all mds. At twenty five. Ariel Leaderman graduated with MD, graduated magnekum Lati from university, then went to medical school, then trained at some of the biggest hospitals, most prestigious hospitals in America, and is here. He's loved by his patients.
Highly qualified, highly meticulous, highly thoughtful, highly competent, highly caring for each of his patients. So he's there fighting for you. And if you're really lucky, you get to see doctor Ario Leaderman, MD, board certified here at thirteen eighty four Broadway for you. And this is a team that we have together for you at thirty enty four Broadway to talk about all options. Not just trying to sell you
surgery or chemo or radiation. No, we talk about all of the options in detail and that you decide what's best for you and let you ask your questions. This is the work that we do every day. We also have lots of information to send you is call us if you want it two and two choices two and two two four six forty two thirty seven. You can also use the digits. If you want our digits is two and two two four six forty two thirty seven two and two two four six forty two thirty seven
the digits to call us. You can also email us or go on web r s n Y dot org, r s n y dot org. And of course you can always walk in and pick up information. It's no charge. We can mail to you, or you can pick up information for yourself, for your loved ones, or for the person down the street who needs help. And we hope
that you help save people's lives. We believe that listeners save lives, whether it's about skin cancers, or lung or breast or prostate kidney blaedd er, primary cancer's, metastatic cancer, even in the bone or lymph nodes or elsewhere. This is the work we do with a huge experience over decades. And one more thing I should tell you is that we're live on the radios. I means you can call
us if you have any medical questions. So many people say doctor Liederman, why don't you talk about x y Z. Well, call us up right now and we'll talk about x y Z as long as you're related to cancer XYZ. Call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. One eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. Noah will pick up the phone nowe We'll put your call right through one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. You don't have to be bastro. We're not
going to embarrass you. You don't even have to say your real name and just talk about cancer issues. So give us a call. We're live now until noon and be back afternoon from one to two pm, three to four pm, and five to six pm today and then overnight. We'll be back at midnight, midnight till about four am, and then Sunday morning tomorrow will be on at six am, and then another show at eleven am till noon and one to two pm in the afternoon, and we're on
every night. Lots of people at midnight. We're on every night at midnight. A lot of people like to go to sleep with doctor Liederman, Wake Up with Doctor Liederman, Worker with Doctor Liederman. Around the world. You can go on your smartphone or your computer anywhere in the world. We're live streamed. All these shows are live streamed anywhere in the world. So just because you don't have a radio, you don't need a radio to listen to the radio anymore.
My name is doctor Liederman. So about this woman with bladder cancer, travel with the spine. She's on treatment, she's doing well, she's happy. There's an answer for her with no surgery, no chemo, no cutting. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. I'm like a man who's very interesting. Man. He's forty eight years old, is from Grenada. It's a black man. He's married with three children. He came to his wife.
He had high blood pressure, diabetes, had legs swelling. He was referred one of the biggest hospitals in New York. They said, oh, you have cancer. You have to have robotic surgery. And he went and had surgery. But his famous surgeon, the famous hospital, he was told that he only needed surgery. He was forty eight years old and he had surgery and there was positive margins. The surgeon left cancer behind. If you're gonna have surgery, they have to remove all the cancer. If they removed part of
the cancer doesn't help anything. The cells that are left keep on growing and growing and cause the same harm. The sad thing is he not only had positive margins, they left the margins where the cancer was so at the edge of the surgery that left cancer, but also had lymphanodes involved. So there's ways to detect that. There's ways like MRIs and pet scans. There's ways to detect it.
And sad to say, he never came here first. So he had the surgery, left with positive margins, positiveative lymph noodes. With surgery, he lost all his erections. With surgery, he leaked urine. He's still leaking urine. He had his shortening of the penis, and his PSA never went down to zero. And you wouldn't expect his PSA to go to zero because there was cancer left in his body after surgery. There should be a PSA of zero. If psa is not zero, that means cancer is left in your body.
It means you should call up doctor Liederman. Two and two choices. You're sad to say you've had surgery and your PSA is not zero, it's time to come in. So this man had no treatment sense of surgery. I saw him as PSA was going up, he had positive margins. He had robotic surgery, it didn't work. There were positive margins at a super pooper hospital. And he came here years ago. It's been about eight years since he came.
And now after our treatment, and you should know this, after surgery, there is a second chance for men with prostate cancer to come and be seen about having radiation. If this surgery failed, and his surgery clearly failed, and he was treated here years ago, and now as PSA is zero and he's doing great, and thank god, he's doing great when he came to us for salvage treatment. So there is salvage treatment for men with prostate cancer who have had surgery where the surgery just did not work.
The surgery didn't do what it was supposed to do. This is what we do. We're here for you. If you wish, give us a call at two and two choices or accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid, name doctor Liederman. We'll be right back.
Numbers mean much to me because of prostate cancer. I'm Johnny Bragg's the number two for 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 Liederman's successful treatment of my prostate cancer. The number zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor Liederman's successful prostrate cas 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 maintain in urinary control. Call my doctor Liderman two and two choices, two and two choices to consider his prostate cancer treatment for you most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Call two and two choices for prostate cancer treatment. Called doctor
Liederman two one two choices. I'm glad I did You'll be number one with doctor Liderman.
Speedy recovery for Defense chiefs secret prostate cancer surgery on Christmas Eve, not informing even the President returned an ambulance with pain absess bowl obstruction secret turned disaster sadly believed is urologists. Like many with prostate cancer, radical prostate surgery has many complications, leakage, impotence, shortening, in inferior results, death. Thousands come to doctor Liederman to learn all prostate cancer options from New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified
Radiation oncologist. Defense chief sadly believed Pie and Sky promises another reason to meet doctor Liederman about highly effective prostate cancer treatment avoiding radical surgery. Best is to meet doctor Liederman. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices, thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Leederman two and two choices thirteen
eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Call doctor Leederman, two and two choices.
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 New York City were just a few steps from the Radio Surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats 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 Liederman at two and two Choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman.
We're back, We'll back. I want to talk about a prominent forty eight year old businessman. He's married with two children, handsome man. He's an attorney. Actually, he had basis cell cancer on the lip and he was seen at a big dermatology conglomerate. He actually never even saw the doctor wind He saw an assistant. The assistant did a biopsy and found a basis cell cancer. It had prior skin cancers. So people who get skin cancers often are fair complected
or blue eyes or blonde hair. Anyone can get skin cancers. Bob Marley had skin cancer. Bob Marley died of his skin cancer traveled to the brain. So skin cancer can be devastating. So he had lumps on his lip. It was a baso cell cancer. Is present for a year, it was growing, it was bleeding, and then they did it. It was called a shaved biopsy. They shaved off the there was no pain or lumps. His vision hearings okay. His
weight is one eighty five. He never smoked. He had colin oscarby every couple of years because of a family history. His bob moments are fine, his PSA is low, his weight's one eighty five's on no medications. He works in Manhattan, works in a group with a thousand lawyers. And I examined him and had a lesion on the left upper lip, and he wanted to treat it. He just did not want to have deforming surgery on his lip. He didn't want his speech to be impaired, or eating to be impaired,
or his appearance to be impaired. And that's why people come here. And of course the dermatologists never told him about doctor Liederman. He heard it himself. He found out, I believe through a listener like you. Listeners said hey, you don't have to have surgery for your skin cancer. You can go see doctor Liederman. And he came and he has a beautiful result. The cancer appears to be gone. He's doing well. He walked in, had his treatment, got out and went to work. And this is the work
that we do every day. Wetweated thousands of skin cancers with high success. You don't have to have surgery or most surgery or deforming surgery for skin cancer. You can check it out. You can come in and learn about it. This is the work we do every day. We just had a woman who writes a stories liturgy for funerals and she came in. She had has cancer on hers
hand and she just didn't want her hand deformed. And often on the hand there's not much skin, extra skin, and when they do surge, it often leaves the skin very tight and difficult and uncomfortable. And she came in and she's going on Caribbean vocation. I thinks going on two cruises, and she's coming back to have our treatment because she just does not want to have surgery, deforming, difficult surgery on her hand, which might be slow to heal,
it's visible. She does not want it. She wants high success. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty for Broadway. By the way, we have a package of information and booklet about skin cancers. You just have to call us or email us to get that information sent to you. Numbers two and two choices if you have a lump and you want us to check it out, call us two and two choices, and
again we can send information to you. 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. I want to talk about a woman who is seventy four years old. She's a very lively woman. She was born in New York City. She's a widowed, she has one son. She had annual mammograms. She had had uterine cancer in the past, treated and now she has an admirable mammogram. She went back and worked on
her scans. She was had a biops which had an invasive breast cancer. She had an MRI and mammogram. She never had cat scans or bone scans or MRIs. And so many doctors I see who take care of women with breast cancer act as if the breast is not part of the body. And one of the first things that we do is to check it out, to check
out and make sure the cancer hasn't traveled. And you'll be surprised how often we find cancers traveled in women whose doctors never thought the cancer could travel well, that's why we fear cancer. We fear cancer because it can travel, can spread, it can kill us. And this is a woman who came to us years ago. She had a biap. See one of the big hospitals in New York. You've seen one of the famous surgeons. She had a lesion was twenty two by eleven by nine melimeters. There's twelve
centimeters from a nippo. It was in the upper outer quadrant. She had a satellite lesion. She had mammograms in the past that were unrevealing. Her cancer was her positive receptor positive grade three. She had had chemotherapy. Elsewhere they star on chemo, and she just hated it. She hated the chemo, she hated the idea of surgery. She came here and we offered her all the options. She chose our treatment only with no mestectomy, no lump actomy. She had some chemo,
It's true, but she didn't finish the chimo. She hated the chemo. And she was trud here years ago and she is now cancer free. How do I know that was? She was just here this week and we check examine the patient. We get mammograms, we get ultrasounds, we got other tests. We get blood tests, We have cancer markers
which are often not done elsewhere. And this is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth three, we have a book just about breast cancer and shows pictures of women with early cancers and late cancers and fungating cancers. We often treat women with huge, massive cancers, and often with small cancers. She had a small cancer. We have some women who come to us with masses eating through the breast like
a hamburger, like the size of a fist. And these are the kind of cases that we take on and we accept and we deal with and we explain to each patient this is what we do. And we have lots of literature and lots of experience and a team that works together here where we accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. It's easy to get to us in the heart of New York City. Now we're talking about a man from Haiti.
He's seventy years old. He also came years ago. It came about eight years ago as a seventy year old man. He had one daughter who was seen by his doctor. His PSA was up to nine. He had no biopsy. Well, the normal PSA is considered four, but I've seen men with prostate cancer with PSA of one or two or three. His PSA was nine. He was seen by his doctor. He was urinating at night. He never got a biopsy. We checked him out, we got an MRI, we got
a biopsy. He had a high grade cancer. He was treated years ago, years ago, with our treatment, which is a unique treatment. We'll explain that when you come in who's treated years ago and now his PSA is zero. He's doing well, his sex life is great, his urinary life is great, he is cancer free. How do you know if you're cancer free with prostate cancer, Well, the PSA should go down to zero and stay there for the rest of his life, or your life, or the
patient's life. My name's doctor Liederman. This is the work we do. We've turned forty thousand patients over decades. We're here to communicate, we're here to educate, We're here to offer information. If you have a cancer question, it's always best to meet in person for consultation. We discuss all details and all options. We're not bastpho about talking about all the options when often doctors don't talk about the other guys. Doctors usually talk about, Hey, the benefits of
radio surgery. Why not. My name's doctor Liederman. That's honor Jimmy Carter.
Thanks for tuning in to the Radio Surgery Hour with doctor Gil Leiderman and myself. If you have questions before next week's show or want a free informative booklet and DVD, just contact doctor Leiderman 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.
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 Liederman 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 care answer called two want two choices? Two one two choices.
Did you know that you've got choices?
That there can be a bad way?
Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor? They don't mean today. To want to choices is a much bad way to want too choices? Conductor. They don't mean today. Did you know that you've got choices?
That there can be a bad way?
Did you know that you've got choices?
Conductor?
They don't mean today. To want to choices a much bad way too. Want two choices, Conductor, they don't.
Mean today, Doctor Liederman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four, Broadway.
The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed.
