The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed 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
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cancer, Candy said straight my cancer. It was twenty two centimeters. Now I am cancer free. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospital stay, no chemotherapy. 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 dot toleeder Men's
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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 Noah, and thank you for
tuning in today and every day on the radio to learn together. My name is doctor Leederman, cancer doctor. Introduce myself in a little bit, and we're here today to learn, and I hope that everyone learns. And by learning, it means you can find out about yourself through other people. That's how we become doctors. As a medical student, once medical student, how do you take a medical student or a normal person, turn them into a medical student, and then turn them into a doctor, and then turn them
into an experienced doctor. Well, it's by repetition, by seeing people and reading, reading about biology and learning about the human body and the function of the body and the anatomy of the body and diseases of the body, pathology, and then seeing patients and then you see one patient and two patients.
And as a medical student, you read about a patient, and then you go home and read about that disease and all the manifestations of that disease that that person may have, and you do that day after day after day after day, and you do it for fifty years, and after a while, you have what's called experience. And that's where I am today. So I have fifty years of experience in medicine, and I've seen many many patients,
tens of thousands of patients. They've treated tens of thousands of patients. And people come here because they want to have some experience, and they want to have maybe a different point of view or get a second opinion or a fresh second opinion. Sometimes it seems, people tell me, and I know it's true because I see so many people that people go to a hospital number one and number two and number three, and the doctors are almost all interchangeable.
They almost always get the same opinion wherever they go, so it's almost you can put doctor one two three in hospital one two three and switch them around and you still get the same answer. That's why people come here because of things that we do and how we think seem to be so different than the usual place. Plus we're not surgeons pushing for surgery, or not chemo doctors
pushing for chemo. And we're not hospitals pushing for what seems to be like top revenue and most expensive procedures and most expensive stay where an independent cancer treatment center. And you might know that AARP has said, do you want to get the best bang for your buck, the best value, it's to go to an independent, freestanding radiology center like Radio Searcher in New York. So
there's lots of reasons why. And a few weeks ago in the New York Times, in Wall Street journally, we're talking about hospital costs, how excessive hospital costs. And I've known that because there's some procedures that we might do for a couple thousand dollars where big hospitals and this is a fact charge seventy thousand dollars. And you can say, well, don doesn't matter, my insurance pays. But a lot of people have a co pay, and there
are most many people let everybody pay for their insurance. And we all know how insurance prices have gone up up. In fact, when people look for jobs, one of the main things we're looking for is not how much you get paid, but where they get health insurance because the health insurance can be ten or twenty thousand dollars. Well, where does that money go? Well, it goes to administrative fees, like the insurance companies take their share,
which is fair enough, and it then goes to hospitals. And why would a hospital charge seventy two thousand dollars per procedure that we charge three thousand dollars. Why would they do that? Well, we know why they do it, because they can. They're the big boys, and they sit down with the insurance companies and they say, well, if you want us to be with your insurance company, you have to accept these rates. And so they're
kind of blackmailed to accept their rates in my view. And also there's nothing to contain their costs. So when you walk into the hospitals, say, wow, it's like the taj mahal, Well, who's paying for the taj mahal? You are paying for the taj mahal and your friends and your neighbors, and me, I'm paying for the taj mahal that you're getting elsewhere.
So let's talk about what I want to talk about today, which is part of insurance rates and the hospital rates and how expensive it is, and how people often don't get true second opinions because if you get the same opinion in place one, two three, it's not really a second opinion. It's just group think. And some people like group think that say, oh, doctor one two three all said I should have my breast remove, so I should have my breast remove, or I should both breast remove. And that's how
it was when I came to New York. When I came to New York, people women with breast cancer, ninety seven percent were getting mestectomy for care of their breast cancer. Ninety seven percent at the biggest hospitals in New York were getting messtectomy. Was that because it was better care? No, I don't believe so, because there'd be studies to show that. There aren't studies to show that it's the most expensive care. And you can find that out.
You can go online and see the price of a mastectomy versus the price of us giving radiation to the breast, and you'll see it's whatever ten times more, and it's invasive and it's deforming. And that's why so many women, for example, with breast cancer come here because some just don't want to have their breast deformed. They don't want their breast removed. Many women don't even want chemotherapy, even though it may give a few percentage points better survival.
Many women just do not want that. And many women, I believe most women will at least want to hear all the options, truthfully, all the options. And in my view, there's nearly no place other than radio Surging New York where women with breast cancer or other diseases, men and women and children who have cancer or suspected cancer hear all the options other than Radio Surgeon New York, because we're not afraid to talk about all the options.
We're not trying to sell something. So let's get down to the bottom line of today's top story, and that's the story of two men. So a tale of two men, something like the famous book of Tale of Two Cities. And one man is a man from Boston. And this man had prostate cancer at a glease in seven cancer PSA ten and a half, so a risky cancer because of gleas and score. That's all the cancers of the microscope. The range is from two which is the best, ten is the worst.
He had seven which was more aggressive cancer. His PSA was more than ten. So he went to the biggest hospitals in Boston. And I talk often about the super duper hospitals in New York, but I can tell you where I trained in Boston, spent many years, was on the staff. Boston has also super duper Pooper Scooper hospitals, world famous hospitals, and they too think that they're the best in the world. And I can vouge for that. They spent many years there, and I know how the thinking goes.
So this man had prostate cancer. He's found and he's fully active man. He's highly respectable man, businessman, family man, and he went to the biggest hospitals in Boston and mainly they want to do surgery on him. And we know for Glease in seven cancer success rate is about sixty percent. And most of the places in Boston wanted to give him hormone treatments. Well, hormone treatments. What are hormone treatments for men with prostate cancer. Well,
they're anti testosterone. They take away testosterone and that leads to a loss of sexual feelings, loss of libido, loss of a actions, loss of muscle strength, hot flashes, weight gain us and growing of the breast. You'll see that in our office. Part of the art of radiosurgery. And many many, many, many many men and many men just do not want to have hormonal treatment if they don't need to have it. And there are some men that do benefit from it, that's true, but there's also men
that probably don't benefit if they can get better treatment initially. And we've analyzed our cases. We've analyzed thousands of our men gone through it, and for most cases we just don't see the benefit. And that's another reason why so many people with for example, prostate cancer, which is one of the leading cancers and men one of the leading causes of death, and men come here for treatment to get better results. So this man from Boston, he decided
after he heard the data to come down for a second opinion. And some people say, oh, I live in wherever, New Jersey. This man came from Boston. He came from Boston every day and he came for treatment. Why did he come because he was motivated to have the best possible treatment and he just number one, did not want to have radical surgery, which most likely would have it best to sixty percent success rate. He didn't want
to have the leakage of year and it's associated with radical robotic surgery. He didn't want to have the impotence with most men losing erections due to the surgery radical robotic surgery, and there's also a shortening of the penis, so there's lots of things. And also it's radical surgery. It's big surgery in the hospital with general anstiege and hospital stay, and it's something that most men never
get over. And if you want more information about it, you can come and we can talk about it in person during consultation, or you can watch our prostate video and you'll see men who've gone through it, and you'll see formerly young, vivacious men who get a radical protectomy in the best hands. They were supposed to be superstars and they're going to be poster boys for radical procect and what a disaster. So you can hear that on the video yourself,
or we can talk about it in person. So Sman just didn't want that. He didn't want radical surgery, was seventy years old. He didn't want hormones. He didn't want was offered in Boston to him. And yet he's hard data, and he understood our program is unique for prostay cancer. And he came here years ago. Years ago, he came, and you can imagine coming from Boston for treatment. Yes, it was an inconvenience for him, but he was motivated and intelligent and he wanted to come because he
wanted the best chance of success and high quality of life. And he came on Friday this past week. He came on Friday, and he came with a new PSA. It was less than zero point zero two, as low as it gets, as law as the measurement gets. And he's been that way for years, and he's cancer free, and he's doing great. Not for a week or a month some of the other places to advertise, oh, a year later, he's doing find no, we don't talk that way.
Is years many years later. Is less than zero point zero two, the lowest level recorded, and it's been that way for a long time. And he's so happy, so happy, and his sex life works and his urinary life works, and he's happy and intact and he's living his life and he's doing the things that he wants to do. And his body wasn't deformed by our treatment. So he brought his friend, and he bought one of his best friends he's known. They've known each other for fifty years. Two
men they've known each other. And this man came and man with a prostate cancer brought his breast friend. Why because the best friend was in big trouble. The best friends story. He's about the same age. He was in business. He went to his doctor. He had blood in the urine. The doctor found a bladder cancer. Another reason to go to the doctor, to come even here for a check up, look for blood in the urine. Blood in the urine could be a sign of kidney cancer, urin cancer,
bladder cancer, urethra cancer, or other diseases. Well, he had blood in the urine. The blood in the urine pointed to the bladder and he was found to have a bladder cancer that was advanced. He didn't want
to have surgery, and no one told him about our treatment. Radical surgery was not wanted because he didn't want his life to change, and bladder cancer radical surgery changed the life greatly, And yet no one told him about doctor Liederman treating bladder cancer with equally high success, and we've been doing it for decades, high rates of success, high quality of life, and no one told him. No one told him, so I said, well, then you have to have chemo. And for the last two years he's had chemo.
He said, relentless chemo. And for a while the chemo worked and for a while the cancer shrink. And then for the past year he's had chemo and all the scans of shown that his cancer is growing, growing, growing, So he's had almost a year of chemo. And remember chemo costs. The cost of chemo is about one hundred to two hundred thousand dollars a year, so it's very expensive. Number one, it'd be great cured the man, but obviously most chemo it's given doesn't cure. And there's a recent
article in a medical journal. It shows that eighty percent of people who are getting chemo for palliation for metastatic cancer think that the chemo is aimed to cure them, when it's not for stage four cancer. For most cancers, chemotherapy is given, possibly to slow down the cancer for a few weeks or months, but it's not made to cure the person. So why is it that eighty percent of people are getting chemo for palliation, which is the usual thing
when cancer has traveled. Think they're getting chemo for cure, but it's not true. So why don't the doctors say it, Hey, you've got incurable cancer. You cannot be treated for cure. You can be treated to slow down the cancer for a few weeks or months. Why don't they say it to the patient? Why aren't they honest? Why are they subjecting the patient to months and years of chemo it doesn't work. That's a good question. I think it's because they don't have the strength and stamp to tell the patient,
Hey, what I'm doing won't cure you. If you want to do it, you can, or you can go see doctor Liederman and learn about other options that may be easier and better. And with doctor Liederman when he treats the cancer in a particular sight, ninety percent chance that cancer where doctor Liederman names and hits the cancer not invasively, in just minutes, we'll stop the cancer for the rest of your life. Why don't they say that?
Why don't they tell the patient all the options? Well, this man, he's an ethnic group, and he went to a chemo doctor the same ethnic group like his friend from Boston with the same ethnic group. And this woman. Doctor kept on giving chemo keemo, chemo kimo chimo and hasn't been working. And I went through the documents that Friday afternoon, just recently, and
it showed that the cancer has been growing. It's been growing, growing, growing, growing, growing, and the patient's telling me he's in pain. There's cancer on the belly button. They're cancer in the belly and it's growing. And the more she gives the chemo, the more the cancer's growing. And it's causing severe pain and suffering. The cancer is causing severe pain and suffering, and the chemo's causing terrible side effects. He has neuropathy, has
numbness and pain in his fingers and his feet. He feels like he's going down the tube. And then I met with the patient. I went through all the records, I examined him, and he has an extensive cancer in the abdomen where one's belly button used to be. His belly buttons socked in with cancer. It's red and hard and tender, and I just touched it. I put my finger lightly on his area where his belly button used to be. I'm belikus, and he shouted wow, and I said, that's
called Sister Mary Joseph. It's known for hundreds of years. There's a name for that. There's a name. When the cancer goes to the belly button, Sister Mary Joseph, You've got a Sister Mary Joseph lymph node. And he responded to that very well and said, wow, no one ever told me that. Yet his doctors saw it for years, saw it tree that successfully. The cancer keeps on growing. So we talked about the options. He has eleven centimeter mass in his belly. I showed him with eleven centimeters.
There's a huge mass of cancer in his belly and this huge mass around the unbelikas, And we talked about all the options. And his friend had brought him here to learn about all the options, and so we talked about
all the options. We talked about how we can try to get rid of this cancer in the belly button or shrink it down with a high degree of success, without chemo, without surgery, without poisons going through his system, with what's called radio surgery, which is pinpoint treatment, non invasive, with invisible beams aimed at that cancer. And this is the work we do. We've treated I've treated forty thousand patients over decades. We have a huge experience.
I suspect it's the largest in the world, and this is the work that we do every day. And also talk to him about treating that big, massive cancer in the belly eleven centimeter mass where he's having pain and suffering. And I also talked to him about getting better scanning. It seems like the chemo doctors and many surgeons also don't want to get the best scanning. The best scanning for most cancers, not every cancer, but for most cancers. It's called a pet PET PET scan. He hasn't had a PET scan
for years. And I said, well, we can get better scanning and know more about your cancer and know more about where exactly it is and give you better treatment with a PET scan. And then at the end of the consultation, he told me, well, my doctor wants me to go on hospice. She wants me to go on hospice, and fair enough from her point of view. From her point of view, he's had two years of
chemo. It hasn't worked. He spent two years at one hundred and hundred thousand dollars that's about probably on average three hundred thousand dollars of chemo and it didn't work, and now she's given up. She has no ideas and told him to go on hospice, go home and die. And his friend from Boston came in and spent a big effort and time and money to come here so that he would learn all the options about his cancer, and he learned
a lot. We spent a lot of time together, went through his records, his physical exam, his history, and at the end of the time, he said, doctor Liederman, I want to get that PET scan with you, and I want to get treatment with you. I want to feel better. I don't want that pain, I don't want to suffer, and I want options that my doctor never told me about. And this is the work that we do every day. And sometimes people will gravitate to doctors are
the same ethnic persuasion. He certainly did his friend also, and yet his friend broke that tradition by coming to me because he wanted better care and to get better care. People are very, very motivated to get better care, more experienced care, and innovative care and non invasive care. And this is the work that we talk about here at radio. Starting in New York, doctor Liederman thirteen and eighty four Broadway, in the heart of New York City,
where except most insurances, medicare Medicaid. This man's going to break his ties with that doctor. He's so disappointed. He's so disappointed that she never offered innovative treatment, she never offered other treatments. She never stopped the chemo when it wasn't working. She went on for two years of useless chemo. And he's in worse shape now, and she wants him to go on hospice, to go home to die. And he doesn't want to die. He wants to get out of pain. He wants to do everything he can to
live longer and live as long as possible. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. And if you don't have a friend in Boston to bring you down, you can come on your own. There's so many trains and subways and buses and ways to get here. The subways one, two, three, four, five, six, ACE and QRBDFM, seven S and Q all come within blocks of our office.
All the trains Long Island Railroad and Path trains and New Jersey trains, it all come to Penn Station or our Grand CenTra, all within blocks of our office. All the buses, there's thousands of buses every day come into Port Authority blocks from our office. To make it convenient for you. It's accessible. Accept most insurance as Medicare, Medicaid. This is the work we do.
You can call us, we'll send you information. You can check our website which is our SNYRG if you want to learn more about the work we do. But the best thing is to meet in person. Doctors and patients have known for hundreds of years. It's the best way. Zoom and telephone calls are really useless. The doctor gets paid, but you can't examine the you can't examine the patient. You can't do what you have to do.
You can't see the patient. The patient can't see the doctor. It's great the doctor gets paid and the hospital gets paid, but what good is it really for the patient. So we do it the way it's intended to do. The patient and doctor meet, We go through the records, we review the records, we examine the patient, and then make options, and we tell you all the options, not just our we're not selling anything. We tell you all the options. Surgery chemo radiation, therapy, combination therapy,
even no treatment. This is what we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. Doctor Liederman the only Harvard trained, Triple Board certified radiation doctor New York, one of the few in the world. First with brand radio surgery, New York, First with body radio surgery in the Western Hemisphere. First for you. If you wish my name, Doctor Liderman 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 charge, 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 on two choices. Radical surgeries
deform beautiful bodies. Doctor Liederman treats cancer noninvasively. Woman afraid to cancel mystectomy. Afraid to offend doctors more than deforming her own body. Woman lost her face, vision, hearing and smell by doctor she felt walked on water. Water is gone, cancer is back. Woman lost her entire arm cancer relapsed with vengeance. Here for second chance after not wanting to wait minutes to see doctor Liederman a visit that might have saved her arm and life. Prostate cancer
surgery elsewhere deforms, leaks, impairs, shortens right. Moment to meet doctor Liederman for cancer treatment is now. Doctor Liderman might save your life. Doctor Liederman most experienced body radio surgery. Accepts most insurances Medicare, Medicaid thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth, first in America. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices.
Welcome back to the radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the WR Studios in the hearts of New York City, or just a few steps from the radiosurgery 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 Liderman at two and two Choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back. We are back. I want to talk about a gentleman. He's sixty nine years old. He's widowed, he has no children. He came with prostate cancer. To me. He was found to have a PSA of thirty three. Normalsa PSA is prostatic specific antigen. It's a good reason for men, if you don't know what your situation is, to come in and get checked
out. I advise it. He came in with a PSA of thirty three Gleason seven, so a very high risk cancer. Normal PSA is four His was thirty three. That's seven hundred percent elevated. Gleason seven. Gleason in seven is very high. And Gleason made a scale from two to ten. How the cancer looks under the microscope, too is the best, Ten is the worst. Everything more than six is more aggressive. He came to me with that. He had a bone skin that was negative. He did not
wake up at night time to yearinate. He had hernias. He lost weight, he went on a diet. When people start losing weight and cancer, we always get nervous about that. He had hernias, he had a diverticulum in his colon erupture. He had his appendix removed. He's widowed, he's a psychologist. I examined him. He had big hernias. Otherwise his exam was okay. But he had an enlarged prostate. So he came to us with this PSA thirty three glease and seven cancer eight years ago. Eight years
ago. Now, normally with normal treatment, if you look up the data, you'll see with PSA thirty three, with most treatments, whether it's radiation or surgery, radical surgery, robotic surgery, with most treatments, the cancer comes rip roaring back, rip roaring back. So he came to me with only our treatment, only our treatment. Eight years his PSA is now zero
zero, he's cancer free. No chemo, no hormones, no other treatment, no surgery, only our treatment for prostate cancer here and he's done great. Came from a peer, say, thirty three down to zero in leasing seven cancer. Now there is no cancer on exam. He's totally normal. And he came in this week. I saw him and wow, is he happy and doing great? And he told me about his friend. He had a friend at the same time who had surgery and the surgery is crying the
blues. The patient with surgeries crying the blues. The cancer came back. He's leaking urine, he's impotent, his penis is shortened. Everything that could go wrong went wrong. And that's what we talk about all the time. The cancer is back. He has now stage four cancer. Our patient PSA thirty three glease and seven. He's fully intact. His sex life works, hiss, urinary life works. He's intact, and he's so happy. Years
later, eight years later, cancer free with our treatment. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. I want to tell you a little sit I told you before I introduced myself. I want to do that. My iam is doctor Gil Liederman. I was born and raised in WATERLOOIO. I went to public school, university, medical school, real MD, and
there's so many people talking about healthcare and what you should do. I'm a real doctor MD, real medical doctor at age twenty five, like my illustrious brother Ted, doctor Ted Liederman MD at age twenty five, and also doctor Ario Leaderman, my son, MD at twenty five. Ril Leaderman went to prestigious universities, trained at the most famous hospitals, and is now here.
Cancer doctor, board certified, working at thirteen eighty four Broadway, accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid, Loved by his patients, loved by the families, loved by the staff. You're lucky to have doctor Ariel Leaderman on your case if you have a suspected cancer or cancer, whether it's a new cancer, recurrent cancer. He's great. There's three doctor Liederman's, all mds at twenty five board certified. Our real Leaderman is here for you, me too,
if you want. I went after medical school MDA twenty five to University of Chicago. Michael Reese trained internal medicine three years, took care of thousands
of people with diseases of the body. Board certified in internal medicine. Then went on to Harvard Medical School, went to the prestigious Dana Farber Cancer Institute, where I trained in medical on college, just treated thousands of patients at Harvard, and then stayed on the staff at Dana Farber and then went on and trained at the Joint Center for Radiation Therapy three more years, prestigious radiation
Center at Harvard Medical School. Triple Board certified, the only Harvard trained Triple Board certified cancer doctor in New York and one of the few in the world. Here for you. So that's who I am in case you wonder. So some people need to know that. And if you can read our literature, you'll see that as well. And I want to tell you another big secret. And the big secret is that we're live the radio, which means
you can call from now till noon. You can call Noah at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten, one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten, one eight hundred three two, one zero seven ten and ask your cancer question. Don't have to be embarrassed. You don't have to be identified and ask your cancer question. You're welcome to do so. And many people say, doctor leader, why don't you talk about XYZ disease? Well, here's their chance. I just got an email from someone and you can
email me too. My email is Guilgil at rs NY dot org. Again, Guilgil at rs NY dot org. This woman just called a few minutes ago. Email me. Actually, my brother died of glioblastoma. Do you have to be worried being the sibling of someone with glioblastoma? And I can tell you the answer is, in general no, you don't have to do any screening tests. It's a sporadic disease. There are thousands every year in America. How do you know about it? Well, unusual neurologic function.
If you're not thinking right or speaking wright have movement problems or other strange problems come in. We'll check you out if you want. That's something we do. And I know a lot about gliobdstomas. My uncle may rest in peace at gliobeastoma more than sixty years ago. And the treatment has progressed tremendously. There was no such thing as brain radio surgery and other treatments for people with gliod lastoma sixty years ago. And I want to tell you some more special
things. That is, we're live on the radio from now till noon. You can call us then be back from one to two this afternoon one pm to two pm, and then this afternoon from three to four pm here for you if you want. And then during the week, we're here every night at midnight. And many people like to go to sleep with doctor Liderman. Many people like to wake up with doctor Leaderman. Many people like to work
with doctor Liederman every night at midnight and Saturday night Sunday morning. We're here from midnight to about five am, so many hours to listen that time too. But we're here every day on the radio to inform. Our goal is to inform so you get better healthcare, better life. Like our man who
flew in from Boston and got treated for prostate cancer. Or this man who had a PSA thirty three glease and seven treated eight years ago, cancer free, and he learned about us because he had a friend who listened to the radio. Radio listeners save lives. And from the grocery store or restaurant, you hear someone talking about cancer, you may want to pat him on the back and say hey, you may want to speak about your condition to doctor
Liederman. He may have some new ideas to help you. Like the man who had the bladder cancer growing through his belly button and growing huge in his body, when his doctor wants to send him on hospital and he doesn't want to go on hospice. He doesn't want to die, he doesn't want to die in pain. He wants to stop the cancer. He wants to have some relief. And this is the work we do. You don't need to have a friend in Boston to drive you in. You can come in yourself
so easily. Monday through Friday. We're here for you. Accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. Doctor Liederman, Radio searcher in New York, thirteen eighty four, Broadway Independent Cancer Treatment Center, accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. Easy to get to call us. Our number is two one to two choices two one two choices in digits. That's two and two two four six forty two thirty seven two and two two four six forty two thirty seven.
iBOT In ninety sixty four years old. He's born in New York State. He's divorced. He has two sons. He came he out of blood clot in his lung. He was on blood thinners, at diabetes, cholesterol, and at an anemia. His temoglobin was ten and a half it should have been about sixteen. He had a colonoscopy and he was found to have a cancer on the right side of his colon. It was alterative, it
was circumferential. It was admocarcinoma. He was anemic. He was probably bleeding from the cancer in the colon, and he was advised to have his colon removed. He saw a surgeon, and at that time he was in kidney failure, and you've seen a kidney doctor, so he saw a surgeon. He was in kidney failure and he just did not want to go through surgery under any circumstances. He had lost weight. He'd lost twenty five pounds going from two thirty to two oh six. His history of diabetes. Was on
a diet and I saw him. Crottin was two, so he's lost more than half of his kidney function. He also had a history of hepatitis, and he came here years ago. He came here six years ago not wanting to have surgery in dire strakes because of his cancer. He's bleeding from the cancer in the colon, and he wanted to be treated and he wanted to have a high success rate. And he was treated here five and a half six years ago with non invasive treatment, no surgery, no chemo, no
cutting, no bleeding, and he treated just in a few treatments. We treated his cancer in the colon. And then years later he went back to that same surgeon and son said, what are you doing in there? I thought he got to be dead. And the man said, no, I had radio surgery with doctor Liederman. I'm doing great. And the doctor said, oh, you have to have surgery anyway. And the doctor pushed him, he really pushed him vigorously to have surgery. And he had that surgery
and they removed his colon and there was no cancer. All the cancer we treated on the right side of the colon was gone. And the man is so angry. He is so angry at the surgeon who pushed him, pushed him to have that surgery. When surgery wasn't necessary. We advised him to have colonoscopy and cat scans and pet scans and cancer markers. And people often
ask how do you follow patients, And that's how we follow patients. We get scans, exams and determined the response to treatment and our success rate for radio surgeries approximately ninety percent across the board. This is the work we do. He didn't need the surgery. He's upset that the surgeon sent him for surgery. He's now back to me. He's coming back because he understands one doctor told him the truth, and that was guess who, Doctor Liederman,
who offered all the options We offered him radio surgery. Also, he chose radio surgery cancer free and get the surgeon for no reason removed his coal and no reason, there was no sign of the cancer. He's angry at the surgeon. He's happy at us. He loves doctor Liederman and he loves the work he gets. Here. My name's doctor Liderman. We'll be right back.
When doctor Liederman came to New York from Harvard, ninety seven percent of women in New York were losing their breasts as breast cancer treatment, but ninety percent of doctor Liederman's patients with breast cancer were keeping their breasts. Doctor Leederman, an outspoken advocate of breast saving therapy, educated women about choices. To arm every woman about breast cancer choices. Breast saving whenever possible and desired.
When every hospital thought standard radiation was okay, doctor Leederman had a better IDEA innovative Doctor Leederman first brought brain radio surgery to New York and body radio surgery to America. Meet doctor Leederman breast conserving therapy over decades. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth, Call two on two choices, two and two choices about breast cancer treatment. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted for a fresh
second opinion, called doctor Leederman. Breast cancer treatment. Called two on two choices, two on two choices. Call doctor Leederman today, two and two choices. It's doctor Leiderman with Cow and West, singing and writing about his cancer treatment. I had catcer and my home was upside at the radio surgery read we got choices. I'm so glad that we do. Want to thank
dot venom photoes phone me and you Eliot your katz. It's my accounting to one, two, three, wells no mo pag is read your granddaddy is such a free can't you treatment? Called doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices called doctor Liederman. Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob red Stone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the WR Studios in the hearts of New York City. Were just a few steps from the
radiosurgery 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, Well, are back. I
want to talk about a sixty four year old woman. She's a black woman. And I say that because in the black community the death rate from breast cancer is about two hundred and forty percent higher other communities. We obviously take care of men and women and children of every race and religion and creating color and ethnic persuasion you can think of. But when the death rate is so much higher, two hundred and forty percent higher, we call it out to
give everyone. Every person of every persuasion should get care for their body, including for the breast. If you haven't had care and you want to get checked out, give us a call, give us a date. There's three reasons why people come here, and number one is to get checked out, to say, hey, doctor Leadhaman, and I wanted to check out my body to have cancer or I was recently diagnosed with cancer and I want the best treatment first. That's the second reason and the third reason. I've been
treated and it's just not working. Like the man whose friend came from Boston and we're getting chemo Keemo Keemo, and Keemo wasn't working. They were sending him home to die on hospice and just didn't want to go home and die in pain. And his friend flew in from Boston to bring him here, to escort him here, and that's what he did just a couple days ago. And he is now in the process of getting a scan and getting treatment in which we don't make people wait. He wanted to think about it on
Friday, think it over the weekend. And this is the work that we do. So there's three reasons why we see people to get checked out. You don't have cancer, it's known, but you want to get checked out. And you'd be surprised how many people have cancer we check out. Number Two, you have newly diagnosed cancer like this woman I'm going to talk about with her breast. And three, you have advanced cancer like the man with the bladder that went to his belly button, Sister Mary Joseph. And treatments
not working, and you don't want to go in the hospital. You don't want to just go home and die. So this woman is sixty four year old black woman. She's from Trinidad. She's single, she has four children. She came with her friend. She had a mass in her breast years ago. She went to one of the biggest hospitals in New York. She had MRI, she had biops. He showed invasive lobular cancer Nottingham six of nine and it was a dumbfell dumbbell shaped leasion, which means it's kind of
big masses on either side. And she had an extensive cancer over six centimeters and the lymphanoe biops who was negative. She had invasive cancer and her cancer was seven centimeters on physical exam, so a huge cancer. She's an ex smoker. She said she had this mass in her breast for at least six months, probably longer. She was not getting regular mammograms. That's another reason
to get checked out. And I saw her. I examined her. She had this six centimeter mass in the upper central portion of the left or breast. There was no lymph nodes. I could pop it. She had this large mass. And a woman who did not want to have surgery at the other hospital, they told her she had to have mesed ectomy, she had to lose her breast, and so we scanned her body. We got a pet scan. We've got cancer markers, which wasn't done elsewhere elsewhere. They're
going to remove her breast without even seeing if the cancer traveled. And so many women with breast cancer, their doctors seemed like they're treating her breast like it's not part of the woman's body. Why do we fear cancer? Why do we fear cancer? Why do I fear breast cancer because not so much the breast, but it has it traveled as it left the breast and gone
to the lymphodes or lungs, or bones or liver or elsewhere. And the doctor's over at x y Z General wanted to remove her breast without even looking to see if the cancer traveled. Wow, so here we got cancer markers. Here, we did a pet scan. Here we staged r up and lucky for her, she came, we staged roup. There was no spread of the cancer. We got cancer markers as well, what are they? Well, normally we get CEA fifteen three, twenty seven, twenty nine,
possibly others. And we gave her copy and she chose our treatment years ago. She just did not want to have radical surgery. She years ago did not want to have radical surgery. She came with a seven centimeter mass, refusing surgery, refusing chemo, not wanting it, not wanting to be deformed. And this is the work we do. And years ago we treated her. And now years later, with our work only, no surgery, no chemo, our work only, she is cancer free. That big seven centimeter
mass is gone. She is happy, she's healthy. She avoided chemo, she avoided radical surgery, she avoided deformity of mestectomy, losing her breast, and this is the work that we do every day. We have special DVDs and booklets about breast cancer. We have a lot of dedicated information about various diseases. It's always best to see the doctor. But if you want information, we can send it to you. You can call us. Even now
you can call it two and two choices. Our number is two and two choices because two and two means New York City and choices like this woman had choices. She could have stayed at that hospital, had no scans, had no markers, had radical surgery, been left without her breast, or she could have got up, come to thirteen eighty four Broadway, learned about their cancer, learned about staging, learned about blood tests, and then she chose our treatment. And now she is cancer free, doing well. That seven
centimeter mass is gone. She said scans, she's had images, she said, blood tests, she's had physical exam And this is the work that we do every day. And he tells you that she's very happy about her treatment and very happy about her results. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty for Broadway, and I went to talk about a woman, a very special woman. She's special because she came from a little town
called Basilia and the Ukraine. It's a town where my grandfather left more than one hundred and twenty five years ago, when he was a fourteen year old child. He left because they were going to recruit him into the army for twenty five years, and he just did not want to be in the army, not to have a family or his family life, and he left. He walked to Germany. He came to America and for one hundred and twenty five years, all his descendants are here. Well, this woman came from
that little town called Basilia and the Ukraine. And I met with her. And I met with her years ago, and she had a breast cancer. Also, she had a large breast cancer. It was a right sided breast cancer, and she just did not want to have surgery. She did not want to have chemotherapy for breast cancer. I had examined her. I found this large mass in the breast and she came to me years ago. And usually when I see a patient, I will ask him where they come from,
where are they born, And she told me Basilia, Ukraine. I almost fought on my chair, because I haven't heard those words in decades since my grandfather talked about basilia when he was talking to me as a young child. So she came and now she came back this past week cancer free. She's cancer free. She's had imaging, she had physical exam, she said
blood tests. She avoided mastectomy, avoided thempectomy, avoided chemotherapy, avoided all kinds of surgery, all with non invasive out patient therapy here at thirteen eighty four Broadway, and she's a very happy woman, cancer free, doing great years after her treatment. Here. This is the world that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway, with decades of experience. We have booklets about breast cancer, DVDs about breast cancer and other diseases. We treat many
cancers. We treat most solid cancers. With his brain cancers, skin cancers, We treat so many skin cancers and people who just do not want to have the deformity of surgery. I just treated a football coach and one of the biggest schools in the nation, and he's a Northern European heritage and he's had several skin cancers and just fed up with mos and fed up with surgery and fed up with being deformed, and he had cancer. Within weeks.
It grew from the top of his right ear up grew up about a centimeter and a half big cancer, just within weeks. I know it's true because I'd seen him weeks before and he didn't have anything there and now had a big mass in the ear. And he saw a surgeon who wanted to cut off the top part of his ear. He's a big coach for one of the biggest football teams, and he just did not on the top part of his ear cut off. And he came here. He's been here before,
and he knows our work. And we treated him just in a few treatments, and you could see the tumor of the cancer growing away. Day by day, would be going away, shrinking away, and now it's gone. And this is the work that we do every day for basal cell cancers and scraamo scarcenomas of the skin, no matter whether so the ear, eyes, nose, cheek, mouth, lips, hands, feet, this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadways. After Leaderman will
take a short break. 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 Leiderman's successful treatment of my prostate cancer. The number zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor Leiderman's successful prostate cancer treatment. 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 functions, four maintaining 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
on 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 bow obstruction secret turned disaster, sadly believed is urologists. Like many with prostate cancer, radical prostate surgery has many complications, leakage, impotence, shortening, 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 Liederman, two and two choices thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Call doctor Liederman, 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, 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 spear 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're back. I We'll talk about a man. He's sixty three years old, born in Puerto Rico. He had a big mass in his throat. He had a sore throat. He's married, he's got two
children. He came with his wife and sister. He had high blood pressure and prostetism and erect out his function. He was seen by a doctor's an urgent carry and a sore throat. He had a mass in the neck. He had pain in the ear and water suns in the ear. He went to E and T. He was giving antibiotics. Antibiotics don't really help with cancer. He had a biopsy shortly thereafter, had a squamous carcinoma poorly differentiated. Went to one of the biggest hospitals in New York. They wanted to
do surgery on his throat and his neck. They're going to do a radical neck dissection and go in his throat and cut out part of his throat. Well, this is the cancer treatment that he doesn't want surgery. He didn't want chemo. And he came here six years years ago. He had this big mass in the neck. He weighed one hundred and eighty pounds. His weight was stable. Let people say, oh, my weight is stable, I don't have cancer. Well, he had a big Cancer's weight was stable.
He had a mass in the neck. It was advised to have colonoscopy. He never had colonoscopy. He had rectal bleeding. There was lots of reasons he benefited by coming here at a large neck mass and well examined him. Had a three centimeter mass in the left tonso was exo fittic, was going down to his tongue. He also had a three centimeter mass and the left lymph nodes. So he had an advanced cancer stage three. And well, he checked out his rectum. He had rectal bleeding. We got a
colonoscar before him, got a pet scan for him. Found that his cancer the tonso was confined to the neck area. In the tonso inside the mouth and outside of the neck. And he just did not want to have radical surgery of the big super pooper hospital like we talked to the top of the hour like hospitals seemed to want to do the most expensive and most radical things, and we're trying to do the least expensive, non invasive things to try
to keep your beautiful body that God gave you intact. It's just the opposite. Well, the word is six years later, he is cancer free, that mass is gone, he's doing well. Statistically most likely that cancer will never come back. So he's doing great from a tonsular cancer that traveled. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. We treated thousands, actually about forty thousand patients with innovative technology, non invasive
outpatient. You walk in, get a treatment, and treatments last use about ten to fifteen minutes with high success where we treat the cancer. Thanks for tuning in to the Radiosurgery Hour with doctor Giliderman and myself. If you have questions before next week's show or want a free informative booklet DVD, just contact doctor Liderman at two one two choices. That's two one two two four six
four to two three seven. That 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 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 opinions Insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Pre booklet DVD two super Convenient Broadway in thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liederman to hit your cancer. Called two one 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, the don't mean today you want to choic is a much bad way too? Want too choices? Conductor, thea don't means 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, THEA don't means today to want to choices much bad way? Too ut two choice, says conductor Leader. Men 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.
