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

11AM Dr. Lederman Discusses Various Treatments for Cancer

Feb 17, 202557 min
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Transcript

Speaker 1

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

Speaker 2

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

from head to toe. Cancer treatment with possibly a second chance for you even if chemo radiation or surgery didn't work or isn't tolerated. Goals are your best results and quality of life. Meet doctor 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. Book of DVD two super Convenient Broadway in

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

Speaker 3

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

Speaker 4

Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight cataplane hop a train, don't has a taate? Call to on two choices for an appointment, Mate, so cancer, Candy said straight my cancer. It was twenty two centimeteras now I am cancer free. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospital stay, no chemoparraphy. I'm grateful to Doc taleder Man at New York Radio Surgery. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospitals. Day made me very happy.

Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight. If the address my cancer had been set straight, called to and two choices for an appointment's mate dot toaleder Men's top rights.

Speaker 3

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

Speaker 5

Welcome everybody.

Speaker 6

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

Speaker 3

Thank you, Rob, thank you no, and thank you for tuning in today and every day, every day we learn together. Every day we're hopefully smarter and more aware of our bodies and more aware of options that may be hidden from you elsewhere. And I see patients every day, and I know that options are being excluded from patients understanding in many places. That's why we're on the radio to educate and to inform and to give you better care and to make you hopefully a radio listener who saves lives.

Listeners do save lives because listeners learn so much. My name is doctor Liederman. I'll introduce myself in a little bit more detail, but I am a board certified cancer doctor here for you, working in New York for nearly forty years, so lots of experience, being a doctor for almost fifty years. I want to talk about a man who came from Saint Petersburg. He came from Saint Petersburg Soviet Union forty years ago when it was when there was a Soviet Union. And he's a productive citizen, a

watchmaker and a jeweler. And now he's about seventy five years old and he had some abdominal pain. Went to the doctor. Eventually he got a cat scan. Eventually he got a buyap. He was found out pancreas cancer. So pancreas cancer is one of the more common cancers. It's one of the more common killers of cancers, one of the more common causes of cancer death. An he went

elsewhere and doctor Wagner to do surgery. And we know that number one, this is a tumor wrapped around them vessels and intestine would make it very very hard to operate. I think it would be impossible and they'd be most likely threatening his life just to make it through that surgery. I think there's any way they could cut out the tumor that's wrapped around vessels and around the dwardenem. But they offered it. That's what they encouraged sad to say.

They didn't talk to him about anything else and that's when he came here and we saw him. We staged him up. There was no pet scan elsewhere. We got cancer markers. His cancer marker. There's blood tests to give you an indication of the activity of the cancer. His CAA nineteen to nine, which is a cancer marker. Commonly, it's not always you in medicine, there's nothing always. But his CAA ninety nine was fifteen hundred and seventy six.

Normal is about thirty five. So it's very rapidly a growing tumor, very aggressive tumor with a high CAA ninety nine and a large tumor wrapped around the major structures. So I don't think that he could have had surgery successfully. He could have had surgery. The surgery could have opened up his abdomen and then said in the old days

they called it a peak and shrieked. They'd surgery would peak and then they'd shriek and say ah, and then close up the patient and it would be a waste for everybody, well not exactly a waste for the surgeon who gets paid, as if he's done the surgery, or the are she there's she's also, or the hospital. It can be thousands, tens of thousands of dollars to do that, and to take a man who's a little bit fragile at seventy five and put him through an unnecessary, unuseful,

unproductive surgery, in my view, is just ridiculous. And so we met and we talked about all the options. And here at Radio New York at thirteen eighty four Broadway, we talk about all the options. We don't talk about one thing. We're not here to sell anything. It seems like the surgeon was hot to sell him on surgery and pushing him for surgery, and we don't do that here.

We talk about all the options. In fact, you'll get literature in the mail if you call us at two and two Choices, we'll send you a package and you'll see all the options over there, whether it's chemo or ammunotherapy, or surgery or various forms of radiation or multipodality therapy or no therapy. We talk about all the options, even hospice, which is no treatment. It's a medical cost, but there's

no real treatment as far as stopping the cancer. And so he came with us and he just finished the treatment, and he was incredible. He had no side effects. He had a large pancreas cancer. We treated him with the stereotactic radio surgery frame. I think we're the only one.

We're the first in America doing body radio surgery, first one in the Western hemisphere, first one of course in New York with stereotactic body radio surgery for pancers, cancers and lung cancers, and liver cancers, and prostate and bladder, you name it. So this man just finished treatment and he had a few treatments, and it's incredible. He's a

quiet man, thoughtful man, loving man. Here every day his wife and his daughter, and his daughter was out there pushing for everything to make sure her dad got care and she would never leave his side. She'd buy him all the time, which was incredible. It's incredible compared to some people come with nobody, which is really sad. So here had a very supportive family. And he finished up the treatment and we got cancer markers and already on the last day of treatment, his CAA ninety nine went

from fifteen hundred. It's already down by eighty percent. It's down by eighty percent, it's down to three hundred, not even having finished the last treatment. We did a blood test is to show because the daughter was so worried about her beloved father, so they wanted a sign that things were working, and we got imaging. Of course during the course of treatment, and imaging also showed the tumor was shrinking. So the tumor was shrinking and the cancer

marker is getting better. Cancer markers a biologic test. It's a protein in the blood system. It's not anything surgical. We just do a simple blood test and tell you and I can tell you that so many places do not do cancer markers. And why do you want a cancer marker. Well, it's like looking at a thermometer when you go out of your house. If you want to know if it's hot or cold, if it's twenty degrees

or forty degrees or eighty degrees. Well, cancer market gives you an idea what's happening to the cancer, so you can say, hey, his family. Then the family understood very well. It was fifteen hundred and seventy six when they started, and it's now reduced by eighty percent. Well that's great. That's a great sign that the treatment's working. And radiosort of usually works. In fact, we've treated thousands of pancreas cancers.

We've treated forty thousand patients altogether, probably more than any other single doctor, and our success is very high to the pancreas where we attack the cancer, approximately about ninety percent. So this man actually gained weight. He had advanced pancreas cancer. He gained weight during treatment, his cancer markt went down.

He's doing all the things, he's eating and walking and carrying on and doing all the things he wants to do, and totally unencumbered by the treatment, and totally in my view, benefited by the treatment because he had no side effects and his cancer is already shrunk by eighty percent by cancer markers. And of course we'll get imaging and physical exams on a regular basis to able to tell him for the rest of his life, hopefully for the next twenty fifty years whatever. And this is the work we

do every day at Radiosuit in New York. When the surgeon at elsewhere in general didn't tell him about any options. And I often tell people, hey, you often will learn things here that you were never told about or were hidden from you elsewhere. And maybe someone believes me, maybe they don't. But this man learned things that he was never told about elsewhere where. He liked the idea of our treatment, he liked our experience, he liked our examples,

he liked our literature, liked our DVD. And this is the work we do. And by the way, we have that for you. Also, you can call us even now or tonight, or whenever you want or not want. At two one two choices, two one two choices. You can call us and get that booklet and DVD. We have different booklets about skin cancers and breast cancers, and lung cancers and prostate cancers. So tell us what you want

information about. And also there's different DVDs. And if you don't want to call, if your bachelorbo call, you can also come in. Many people come into our office. We're in the heart of New York City, so it's easy to get to us. All the subways and buses and trains come right to our neighborhood. Half a million people are in our neighborhood every day. So you can walk in our door and get a package of information for yourself and maybe for the loved one who really needs it.

If it's not you or your neighbor or your friend or the person down the street who you know is suffering and they don't know where to turn, or they're going elsewhere and just not doing well. You might be able to give them a help hand and tell them what you've learned here on the radio every day here with doctor Liederman. I was talking a man I treated ten years ago, a sixty two year old man from Jamaica. And we know that who's got the highest risk rates

of prostate cancer. Well, Black men. Family history, if your dad or brotherh had prostate cancer, that increases rate tremendously, and also Caribbean black men, So there's lots of groups that have But any man can develop prostate cancer. In fact, the youngest person ever to die of prostate cancer is only thirteen years old. So any male can have prostate cancer. And so many men think it can't happen to them. It can't happen to me. I'm so invincible, I'm invincible.

God will never take me off this earth. Well, I can tell you those men really suffer a lot because when they get a cancer, God forbid, they get a cancer, and it's hard for them to accept it. They just think they're so invincible, and prostate cancers you don't have to feel something. So many people think you have to feel something, you have to have bleeding, you have to lose fifty pounds, or you have to have a lump somewhere or paint somewhere. Well, it doesn't. It's not like

that at all. You can have a cancer. Imagine you have a cancer size of a pe inside your lung or your breast, or your prostate, or your pancreas or your liver. You cannot feel it. You cannot feel it, you cannot know it. And that's what's so insiduous about diagnosis of cancer, early cancer. And we know death rates are decreasing in people who get screening, so screening is so important. So this man came to me. He's Jamaican born sixty two years old. He's married with two kids.

He came with his wife as a loving family, and he was found to have a prostate cancer gleas in seven. Gleason is how the cancer looks under the microscope. As PSA was five point one on physical exam. He had a large prostate. He had a cat skin and bone scan. He didn't get other tests that we prefer, such as MRI in PET scan. His way it was one sixty eight two years before it was one seventy eighty six foot two. It was on no medications, he had no allergies,

he had only surgery for hernia in the past. And well, he came to me in ten years ago. He heard what he heard, and he heard that our success rate for glease in seven cancer is ninety percent. With robotic or open surgery, it's sixty percent. With standard radiation it's sixty percent. So our results are fifty percent better than with radiation elsewhere, or surgery, radical surgery or robotic surgery. And he liked the idea of avoiding the hospitals and

avoiding big surgeries. And he liked the idea of a place that provides data in comparison information. Most places do not show you their data. In fact, they have no data. And my knowledge, having treated nine thousand men with prostate cancer, probably one of the largest experience by a say doctor, I've never seen a patient get information printed information elsewhere about their success or comparison data except here. And I think it's very reassuring for a man to see what

our results are. It's a lot of a work, of course, and we provide that to the patient because we think the patient deserves that. So ten years ago, this man came to me with a glease in seven cancer PSA five point one. He didn't want to be impotent from radical surgery, which happens about ninety seven percent of time. He didn't want to be leaking urine, which happens up

to eighty percent of time. You didn't want to have his vital organ shortened, which happens commonly with surgery because when a plumber cuts out a segment of a pipe, they have to bring the ends of the pipe together to make that pipe work well. With surgery and the prostate, the surgery removes the prostate and the urethral the urethere is a tube that goes through the PROSTATECT that carries urine.

So when the surgeon cuts from the prostate and removes the prostate, he shortens the penis and damages those little nerves because sexual impotence and leakage of the urine, and not everyone survives radical surgery. So this man ten years ago, at age sixty two, came to us, trusted us, and had treatment, and now ten years later his PSA is zero, and I can tell you that he's very happy and amvatory and doing all the things, and he's sexually active

and his urine is completely controlled. And this is how our patients want to be who have treatment. In fact, I think everyone wants to be this way. It's just that with us, most of our patients are this way. So it's high success and lots of experience. They have lots of data to show you. We have booklets and DVDs to send you if you want, you can call us even now. Two and two choices two and two. Choices two and two means New York City, and choices

means that you do have choices. Just like the man who had the pancreast cancer, they want to do surgery elsewhere, which we know would have been a disaster. This man elsewhere, they want to do surgery all and would have most likely harmed his sexual life and urinary life and his vital organ and not been as successful as our treatment. That's why so many people with cancer or the possibility of cancer, or who come will get checked out come here.

See doctor Liederman, thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City, where we accept most insurances Medicare, Medicaid. My name is doctor Liederman. We'll be right back.

Speaker 7

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 so 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.

Speaker 3

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

Speaker 5

You treated me.

Speaker 8

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.

Speaker 3

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

Speaker 8

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

Speaker 3

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

Speaker 8

She would be able to keep your 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.

Speaker 3

Any regrets, not at all, called doctor Liederman at two and two Choices, thirteen eighty four Broadway. Most insurances Medicare Medicaid accepted.

Speaker 6

Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman 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, 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 Leiderman, we're back.

Speaker 3

Hey, we're back. We talk. This beautiful, wonderful woman came to me first ten years ago. She had abdominal pain. She was seventy six years old. She had abdominal pain. She went to one of the big hospitals in New York City. She had cat scan and they found a mass in the liver. The surgeons wanted to cut on her sounds like a recurring nightmare theme. The surgeons who want to cut, well, yeah, and this was one of the big hospitals. She had pain. She weighed one hundred

and ten pounds. She was five foot one for a small woman. She started in the military for thirty years and her biopsy showed in a paddle cellular cancer, so she had a primary cancer of the liver. There's basically two kinds of cancers that you find in liver, those that started a liver, which are rarer, and those that spread to liver, like breast cancer and lung cancer and pancras cancer and colon cancer that spread to the liver because a liver gets lots of blood supply and the

cancer cells are floating around in the blood supply. So she had a primary cancer of the liver. Her her paddles cellular cancer. The surgeons were hot to give her a surgery. They were giving it to her. They were I guess selling it to her or someone was paying for it. And she just didn't want the idea at age seventy six to have surgery to remove part of her liver. And she had been told about the different things, but the surgeon never told her about the options. Again,

we talk about all the options here. We're not afraid to talk about options. I think when we talk about options, people understand we're trying to educate them and not sell them something. We're not trying to sell anything to anybody. You can come in, you can learn, you can walk out, no problem. It's your business. We believe you are the president of the United States of your body. So she came ten years ago with this mass and the livers biopsy proven and paddle cite or cancer said high cancer

markers which are in the hundreds. Again, cancer markers give you an idea of how active the cancer is. And we treated her just with a few treatments of radiosurgery. Radiosurgery is not surgery. It's a misnomer. Was named by

a surgeon in Sweden. The one to say the radiation beam would be like surgery to cut, but there's no cutting, there's no bleeding, there's no anesthesias, sending invisible beams to attack the cancer anywhere in the body, whether it's in the brain or the skin, or the liver or the lung or the esophagus, or the gotacologic sites or ovary or prostate or pancreas or bladder or bone or lymph nodes. There's a whole list if you get our book that you'll see a list of I don't know more than

one hundred kinds of cancers that we commonly treat. So we treated her ten years ago, ten years ago, and she's been cancer free ever since. So it tells you about the durability. Some people think all radiation just is a temper a measure. No, for most people where we aim to beam, it's a permanent treatment for that cancer.

So this woman ten years ago was treated with stereotactic body radio surgery and the body radio surgery frame from the doctor first performed and has done the most body radio surgery in America for the longest period of time here in New York. And she remains cancer free, and she's happy and grateful, and I'm grateful for her. I'm grateful for her trust. She came with her daughter. She has a loving daughter who usually doesn't come with her. So the daughter came, the mother came and went over

to the data and this is what we do. And we of course get new imaging and new blood tests to make sure everything is a okay on a regular basis. And most people come and ask me things like that, doctor Liederman, okay, you treat me. But then what happens? What happens as if I'm running away, I'm running out of town. Well, I've been in town for forty years. I've been a doctor for fifty years. I'm not planning to run away anywhere. Here at thirteen eighty four Broadway,

we're except most insurances, Medicare and Medicaid. One thing I want to tell you, by the way, is that we're live on the radio, and that means you can call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten and call with your medical questions. I don't have to be bastrol. We're here until noon every Sunday and other hours too, are actually on the radio many times every day. One eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. One eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. Call

Noah will pick up the phone. Call and Noah will put your call through, and you don't have to be bashful or shamed. One eight hundred three two one zero seven ten, live until noon. I should tell you one other secret, that is today Sunday, we're also here from one to two pm. Where every night on WR from midnight to one am, and lots of people like to go to sleep with doctor Liederman and wake up with doctor Liederman and work with doctor Liederman. Why because well,

this this program is broadcast worldwide. You can get on your phone or computer. I have people. Had one man who came from Shanghai, China. He told me he'd be under the stairwell at work listening to his smartphone and he had esophagio cancer and they were giving him water, sailing water for esophageo cancer. He came like, I don't know, like the end of December one year, and yeah, this

is esophagio cancer. You couldn't swallow. And in China they were giving him only salt water and he couldn't take it. He was he couldn't eat. He esphagus totally blocked up. And he said, doctor Lee might have to get out of here for my visa by December thirty first that year, whatever year that was. And he learned about me on the on the phone. He listened to this program on the phone, came here and just in a few days

we're able to treat his esophagus. And before he left a few days later, he was able to eat, which was incredible because he had gone months and months with his esophageal cancer, unable to swallow until he came to Radio Cerity, New York, and he learned about it by listening to this program on his smartphone in a stairwell in Shanghai, China. So yeah, it is possible to hear this program anywhere in the world if you want, and if you wish, and if you want to learn. That's

why we're here today. So again the schedule. Every night at midnight on WR you can listen while you work or sleep or whatever. And then on Saturdays, every Saturday, we're here from eleven am to noon, from one to two pm, three to four pm, and four to five and choose being five to six pm. Every Saturday. Again from eleven to noon, from one to two, three to four,

and five to six every Saturday. Every Sunday, every eleven o'clock to noon on Sunday and one to two, and then every night at midnight and Saturday night, we're here all night from Saturday night going into Sunday. So Saturday night going into Sunday, it's really early morning Sunday. From midnight until four am, we're here on the radio. And I want to introduce myself. My name is doctor gil Liederman.

I was born and raised in waterlouiow I said earlier, I'd introduced myself, so you know who you're talking with here on the radio, because so many people give advice, they don't really tell you what their background is. Even people that go to the doctor's office, they think they're seeing the doctors, say oh, I saw doctor X. He said, oh, and I go check out. And the person I saw I wasn't even a doctor, wasn't even I don't know what,

wasn't even a resident. And so I want to tell you who I am, so you at least know who's on the other side of this radio. I was born and raised in waterlouiow. I went to public school, university Medical school MD at twenty five, just like my illustrious brother, doctor Ted Liederman MD at twenty five, and like doctor Ario Leederman MD at twenty five three. Doctor Liederman's all real medical doctors m D trained in this beautiful country

at great medical schools MD's at twenty five. Aril Leederman trained went to the most prestigious schools, trained at big hospitals, famous hospitals across the nation, from the Atlantic to the Pacific trained, educated, board certified, and is here treating cancer patients and seeing cancer patients and seeing people suspicious of having cancer, and seeing people who have had treatment that doesn't work and wanting a fresh second opinion. So if

you're really lucky, you get doctor Ario Leederman. It was thoughtful, meticulous, caring, compassionate, loved by his patients, loved by their families, loved by the staff. This is doctor Ario Leederman. If you're lucky, you get to see doctor Ario Leederman, board certified MD, real doctor here at Radio sit in New York, accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. Just called two and two choices

to see him me doctor Gil Liederman. After MDA twenty five, went to years to Chicago Michael Reese trained internal medicine for three years, took care of diseases of the body thousands of patients in Chicago, and then when onto Harvard Medical School, trained at the prestigious Dana Farber Cancer Student

Medical Oncology for years, treated thousands of patients. Was on the staff at the Harvard Medical School Joint Dana Farber for years and then also at Harvard Medical School, trained at the Joint Center for Radiation Therapy for years Board certified, the only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation doctor in

New York, one of the few in the world. Here for you and you get all the benefits of training and education, experience, and the experience of the doctor who first performed brain radio Sirger in New York, first performed fraction at brain radio sir New York, first performed radio surgery of the body in New York in America, the

United States Western Hemisphere, with forty thousand patients treated. So this is the work that we do every day at thirty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the hardwork city. It's easy to get to US. All the subway go to US one, two, three, four, five, six, ACEE and QRBDFF, seven S and Q. All the city buses, all the interstate buses go to Port Authority. There's more than a thousand. It's the busiest bus station in America.

Port Authority and then the two biggest train stations in America. One's got the most trains, one's got the most passengers. Penn Station and Grand Central or close walking distance to US. Walking distance to US so we made our office in the heart of New York City to be close to transportation,

to be close to you, to be convenient. We accept most insurances to be accessible, and we're here in the radio every day so you can understand our philosophy and what we do and what we have done and what we will hopefully do in the future for you or your loved ones. So give us a call if you want. My name is doctor Liederman. We'll be right back.

Speaker 9

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

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

Speaker 3

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

Speaker 4

At the Radio Surgery.

Speaker 3

Choices.

Speaker 4

I'm so glad that we do well. Thank Doc Lenom.

Speaker 6

Monday and you.

Speaker 4

Helio cancer.

Speaker 5

It's my counting one, two, three, wells up.

Speaker 10

No more pay.

Speaker 3

Your brand.

Speaker 1

That is such too.

Speaker 3

Free cancer treatment called doctor Liederman two and two choices. Two and two choices, called doctor Liederman.

Speaker 5

Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour.

Speaker 6

This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the w o R studios in the hearts of New York City. Were just a few steps from the Radio Surgery New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, Billy 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.

Speaker 5

You can also call doctor Liderman at two.

Speaker 6

And two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey doctor Liderman, we're.

Speaker 3

Back, We'll back. I want to talk about a fifty nine year old man. He's referred by a urologists. There's some eurologists a few that hate to do surgery in the prostate, and they hate to do it because it's expensive and it's toxic and it destroys in general the man's quality of life, takes away erections and control of urine and shortens the Vado organ and the results are

inferior to our results. So there's a the urologist who knows our data and just hates to do radical surgery on prostate cancer because he just doesn't want to harm the man. He doesn't want to destroy the man's quality of life. He's sympathetic to the patient. And this maation came with a more aggressive cancer glease in seven PSA five point three he had. I read four pirate four is how the prostate looks under the MRII magnet imaging, which every man should get with prostate cancer if I

had my way. So he had a gleas in seven cancer. He had had other diseases, also had thyorer disease and high blood pressure, and well, we talked about the data and he knew that there was a ninety percent success rate here versus sixty percent elsewhere, and he chose our treatment years ago and now his PSA is zero and he's happy and he's functional, and he's doing everything he wants to do, and that's how we like our patients to be. And we talked about another man. This is

a man that just came in recently. He is sixty years old. He had high blood pressure and diabetes, and he had a biopsid prostate before he was working construction. And he had actually seen me about six years ago. He saw me six years ago. His PSA was eight point two, and I talked about he's the man who think they're invincible. So six years ago is PSA was eight point two three and ten years ago is nine point one. And he had a biopsy has urination twice

a night, and I saw him. He had a marked in large prostate at that time, and he didn't show up for six years. He thought he was invincible, he thought he could beat it. It's like one of my famous professors at Harvard, C. C. Wong would say, if you've never seen a tiger. You don't know what to be afraid of, Meaning a tiger can destroy you in a second, and cancer can destroy you in a second too. So this is a man who had never seen a

tiger before, even though he was warned. He was here six years ago and now he comes back remembers PSA. Before six years ago was eight point two three. Now it's one hundred and sixty seven. One hundred and sixty seven. Now he has a glease in nine cancer, one of the most aggressive cancers. He was unable to urinate. The prostate was blocking off his year and he was in pain. The prostate was blocking off the urine, blocked off the kidneys. He was in kidney failure. His cratning, which is a

measure of kidney function, was off the wall, terrible. His electrolytes were terrible. He also has a high A one C, which means a high sugar and diabetes. He had lost weight, and so many people with advanced cancer lose weight. Why because the cancer is just eating at the body. He lost twenty pounds. He went from two hundred and twelve to one ninety two. And he came to me and

I examined him again. He had a huge sulcus to sulcus prostate massive cancer gleason nine PSA one hundred and sixty seven, no treatment, and this is what we do. So he told him six years ago, Hey, it's always better to be treated early. Early means you have a better chance to be successfully treated early. That's true for most every cancer. To be treated early before the cancer is a chance to travel when you have the best chance to be cured. He didn't listen sad to say,

really sad, and we're sad about it. He's sad about it. Everyone's sad about it. But we're treating him nevertheless. So we're going to try to help him with his prostate and the cancer and get him into remission. And this is the work we do even when you're PSA's one hundred and sixty seven with the glease of nine and kidney failure. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. So you have questions come in. There's three groups of people that we see.

People who are suspicious, who just want to know. They know that you can't feel in early cancers. They want to get mammograms and scans of the chest and pancreas and prostate and blood test and physical exam. They want to know. And the second group of people recently diagnosed like he came six years ago, but he walked away. And then people who are treated elsewhere and the treatment elsewhere doesn't work, and they want a fresh second chance.

And that's what we give people, is a fresh checond chance. Here at Radio Serty, New York and two choices phone number address thirteen eighty four Broadway. There's article in the Wall Street Journal this week by Brianna Abbott about cancer rates for younger women rising, and it's pretty dramatic. So she writes that the face of cancer United States is getting younger and more feminine. We talked about this previously. We talked about how there's more colon cancer and young

people now than ever before. We're seeing colon cancer in twenty and thirty year olds. And she writes at cancer rates for women United States have risen during the past half century, particularly women under sixty five, and particularly with breast cancer. Men have had a decrease in cancer. So it used to be men had fifty percent more cancer than women. Now it's equal. So women have gained on

men by doing bad things like smoking. So women have been smoking and not giving up smoking more men have given up smoking on a percentage basis, So women started smoking later and yet to give up smoking, and lung cancer is the number one cancer killer for many United States. The cases and death rates have dropped after smoking rates have dropped, but women started smoking heavily after men have been slower to quit, and their lung cancer decline has

not really taken place in the same way. Lung cancer among women under sixty five was greater than men for the first time in twenty twenty one, so the data is just coming out now years later. But women are having a high rate of lung cancer and they're more likely to get diagnosed with lung cancer not being a smoker. So just because you're not a smoker, that doesn't protect you from getting lung cancers. So often I see patients say, oh, uncle Harry died of lung cancer, but he was a smoker,

like he caused it. And maybe in a way he did. But nowadays there's more and more people getting lung cancer who are not smokers, another reason to get checked out. And overall, the death thread the United States since nineteen ninety one has dropped by thirty four percent, So there's thirty four percent fewer cancer deaths now than there were when most of us were younger people, and that translates

to four point five million fewer cancer deaths. So four point five million people are walking around today that would have most likely been dead had they've been born earlier in the American history, and a lot of the decline is from decreases smoking less and better cancer screen screenings and better treatments, and the number of adverted deaths people who would have otherwise died twice as much for men

than women, so it's a dramatic change. In the past, it was one point six men diagnosed for each woman. Now it's almost equal, so you can see that it's sad to say women are catching up with men or men are catching up with women. And prostate cancer rates had increased dramatically in the nineties when PSA screening came about, and now that's now dropped, so we're detecting cancers earlier,

which is great. Breast cancers have increased by one percent each year in the last decade, and there's more breast cancer in younger women. So two thousand and seven cancer rates for women between fifty and sixty four were lower than men, and now there's more cancer in women than men in that same group fifty to sixty four and young adults under fifty women also had a higher cancer rate. The cancer rate for women under fifty is eighty two

percent higher than men. So you're talking about tremendous increases in cancer in women. There's more breast cancer and thyroid cancer. Also. I talked about before how testicular cancer and erecto cancer effects men in the younger categories. Why is this Well, some speculate that women not having children until later in life contribute to the trend, either not having children or later in life and no breastfeeding or later breastfeeding, which

we're all protective. There's other reasons to get cancer, physical inactivity, alcohol, obesity. These are all reasons that are of concern. Breast cancer rate has dropped by death. The deaths in breast cancer since nineteen eighty nine is dropped by forty four percent by better treatment and better screening. But it's the leading cause of death in women under fifty. So what's the bottom line here, Well, get in shape, lose weight. If

you are overweight, stop smoking or never smoke. Courage people around you not to smoke. Get screened, get colonoscaby, get mammograms, get ultrasounds of breast, see your doctor, get blood tests.

There's so many things skin cancers and number one cancer in America, three million people a year get skin cancer, and sad to say, so many have radical deforming mos surgery so often, whereas there's other non invasive treatment for skin cancer, like here with radio stort in New York, where we treat so many people with skin cancers with basal cell and squamous cell and other skin cancers non invasively, and so many skin cancers are of the face and

head and neck area around the ears, eyes, nose, and mouth, and so that surgery is often very deforming. Also on the hands and feed and trunk. You don't have to have surgery to be treated for skin cancer. So we have information to send you about skin cancers and breast

cancers and lung cancers. Just give us a call now or later or when you want at two and two choices if you want two and two two four six forty two thirty seven, two and two two four six forty two thirty seven, Doctor Liederman We're here for you. We'll be right back.

Speaker 9

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 Leederman's successful treatment of my prostate cancer. The number zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor Liederman's successful prostate cancer treatment. What every man wants? The numbers one, two, three,

four important for every man with prostate cancer. One getting the most successful treatment, two avoiding radical robotic surgery, three keeping sexual 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 on 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 Leiderman.

Speaker 3

Remembering Jimmy Carter, thirty ninth president living to one hundred, first president treated with radiosurgery, Doctor Liderman first to perform body radio surgery in America. First and first, why a president chooses radio surgery for cancer treatment, same reason as our patients. Well tolerated, highly effective, where we attack cancer outpatient proven over decades, no cutting, no bleeding. Learn from doctor Liederman. First with body radio surgery. Thousands treated, high

success and high quality of life. Commonly meet doctor Liederman called two and two choices. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Thirteen eighty four Broadway in Manhattan. Learn what President Carter knew. Call doctor Leederman two and two choices, two and two choices. Doctor Liederman believes you're president of your body. For newer recurrent cancers, call doctor Leederman two and two choices, two and two choices. First President and first Physician Lee Nderman.

Speaker 5

Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour.

Speaker 6

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, treats prostate cancer non in Basically, 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.

Speaker 3

We're back. I want to talk about a sixty two year old man. He's got six children, worked in construction industry. Came with his daughters. PSA was nine point nine, so getting up there. Normal PSA is considered four or less. And you can have prostate cancer when your PSA is one hundred and two or three. So don't think you're protected by having a PSA less than four. That's an arbitrary number. He had a glease in six PSA nine point nine. I examined him large prostate. He came to

me nine years ago. Nine years ago he came to was an ex smoker. He had no car for short's breath. His bowels were fine, his arms and legs are fine, and he had some hip pain and shoulder pain, but it was not cancerous. His bone scan was negative, and nine years ago we treated him for his glease and six PSA nine point nine cancer and he's now cancer free.

His PSA is zero. He's doing great. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York Citybut a man, very distinguished man. He's sixty nine years old. He has his own church. He started his own church in New York City forty years ago. He came with his wife and daughter. He has diabetes, cholesterol, high blood pressure, and well. He had a lump on his neck about a collar bone. It's called a superclavicular No.

This was about nine months ago. He had a biopsy said it was a poorly differentiated cancer. Doctors thought it was a neuroendocrine cancer, and they treated him for a neuroendocrine cancer for eight months while he was getting weaker and weaker, and the mass was growing and he was losing weight, and he was in more pain and he was suffering, and he would have think, well, after two months he's worse, and three months he's worse than four

months he's worse. But they keep on giving the same treatment for eight months and then finally someone checks his PSA and finds it to be one hundred and thirty two, and finally someone does a recto exam. And so many men think a recto exam so terrible. But I can tell you my experience here at radios from New York. It's an easy test and it gives you an idea what's going along one with the blood test. That's why I believe every man should know what his PSA is

and know what his recto exam is. It's not a big deal. And so finally, after eight months of the wrong chemo, they gave him the wrong chemo for the wrong reason, someone got a PSA and saw his recto mass was a huge actually prostate answer. He got a biopsy showing a very aggressive cancer gleas in ten, which is the most aggressive cancer there is. Gleason score goes from two, which is the best ten the worst. He

had ten. And his PSA was going up and up and up, even though they kept on giving him the chemo for the wrong type of cancer. And he came here in terrible pain in his CPA, say elsewhere was going up for one thirty two, on forty one, forty and then two hundred and fifty three, and he had cancer and the prostate semino vesico and the neck, the thorax, abdominal nodes all markedly increased. Everything was worse. And they never thought about saying, hey, if he's worse, maybe we

should reevaluate. Why is he worse? Why is this man worse? Why is he worse? And you'd think that would be common, you'd think it would be the first thing that came to someone's mind, especially a doctor's taking care of a patient with cancer. But no, everything got worse. His pain got worse, his mask got worse, his cancer marker got worse. Everything got worse. And he kept on the same treatment. And he came to me just a few days ago

with intractable pain eating through his bones. He could barely sit up or move or sit down or lay back. Just incredible. And so he put together a program we called his insurance company emergently to get approval and got his treatment already approved within a short period of time. And he's already under treatment within a short period of time. In so many places, I know, these big places, Oh, come back in four weeks or six weeks or eight weeks or whatever. No, we don't do it that way here.

It's so different. We're so eager if you want. We don't push anybody. But this man was desperate. He was in terrible pain. He could barely sit or stand or lay down in terrible pain. He was a stoic man and just grinning and burying it. He was there with his family and a loving wife and loving daughter, and they both actually knew all the details of the case. Just so dramatic, and so we got put together a

program for him. We're starting the treatment immediately to try to get the pain and suffering under control and get the cancer in remission went for eight months. He'd got the wrong treatment for the wrong disease. So that's another reason why we say, if you're not getting better, you might want to give us a call. Two and two choices. I talk about all the time, the three reasons to come to get checked out, or you're newly diagnosed, or

number three, you're getting treatment. This is not getting better, give us a call, and maybe you're on the wrong track like this man. Doctors were on the wrong track giving the wrong treatment. There was expensive treatment, costly treatment. The average chemos one hundred to two hundred thousand dollars a year. So yeah, there's a big motivation to keep on giving treatment. But this treatment was no good. He

was getting worse and worse and worse. The mass was bigger, the pain was worse, everything was worse, and yet they kept on giving him the same treatment. Outrageous, really uncredible. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. You're welcome to come in. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. It's easy to communicate with us. You can email me even now at Gailgil at r s NY dot org. Again, gailgil at rs NY dot org if you want, and you'll probably get an answer

pretty quick, probably quicker than your own doctors. I'll talk about a forty four year old man. So I just recently a couple of minutes ago, talked about how cancer is occurring in younger and younger and younger people. So it's a forty four year old man referred by a prominent doctor. He's married, has two children. He came with his sister two years ago out of anemia. He had colonoscopy. He was found to have a colon cancer. He sent

for surgery at one of the big hospitals. He had chemo therapies, he had surgery and chemo, and the chemo was stopped because his liver tests were getting worse and worse and worse and worse, and finally well. Then he went to alternative medicine doctor got vitamins and everything got worse and worse and worse and worse. Then he went to a super pooper pooper pooper place. They did a cat scan of his abdomen, found the mass in the liver and he was just fed up with the chemo.

He had had chemo. The idea of the chemo was to stop cancer from spreading in the body. And well, the vitamins didn't help either, and he had a big mass in the in the liver and he had scans. The scans before it did not show that he had pain in the right flank. His weight again, it'st another case of losing weight with stage four cancer. Colon cancer travels to the liver is stage four. His weight went

from two five to one eight three. Some people naively think when they lose weight when they have stage four cancer, it's the diet. I don't believe it's a diet. I believe it's a cancer eating away at the body, just like when you plant a tree, you put fertilized in the ground, it gives it extra nutrition. Well, the cancer goes out and finds it by eating your fat and

your muscle and your bone and everything else. So the can So I believe a twenty pounds of his body, and he came to me with terrible pain in the flank and he just did not want more chemo. He had surgery elsewhere at super duper places. He had chemo elsewhere, it didn't work. He wanted a treatment that could most likely stop the cancer and take care of the pain. And he just finished the treatment a couple of days ago. I met with him again and the pain is gone

and he's going in remission. And this is what we want. This is what we need for every patient. So he'd been at super Duper General, he had had surgery, didn't work, chemo didn't work. Came to us with stage four cancer, losing weight and pain. And now his weight is stabilized and his pain is gone and he's happy. And of course we're going to get follow up testing on him, imaging, physical exam, blood tests, cancer markers. This is the work that we do every day. At thirteen eighty four Broadway.

Broadway in through the eighth Street in the heart of New York City. Just one more passion. I want to talk about seventy nine year old man who came with a mass in the kidney. He was seen l I swear that you're all just You're all just a doctor cuts on kidneys. You all just wanted to cut out his kidney. He had a mass. We biopsy that showed a tumor, and he wanted non invasive treatment. Wanted to

keep his kidney. I want to lose his kidney. So many people who lose their kidney are so angry about losing their kidney when they know they could come here and have non invasive treatment, no cutting, no bleeding, no hospitals, no anesthesia, invisible beams to attack the kidney cancer with high success. We treated thousands. I've treated forty thousand patients with radio surgery, probably the most in the world by

a single doctor. This is the work we do every day, Doctor Liederman, God bless you and thank you and see you soon.

Speaker 6

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 Liederman at two one two choices. That's two one two two four six four to two three seven. That's two one two two four six four two three seven.

Speaker 2

For cancer treatment. Most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York, First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor 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 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. 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.

Speaker 10

Did you know that You've got choices that there can be a bad way. Did you know that you've got choices?

Speaker 7

Conductor?

Speaker 10

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

Speaker 3

That there can be a bad way?

Speaker 10

Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor, they don't mean today. To want to choices is a much bad way too. Ut two joy, says conductive leader.

Speaker 3

Men today, Doctor Liederman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four, Broadway.

Speaker 1

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

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