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For cancer treatment. Most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York, First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor 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 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 to one, two choices to meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. BOK with 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.
Prostate cancer very common. Men's cancer worldwide will double by twenty forty Thirty five thousand men die here annually from prostate cancer. What to do? It's doctor Liderman with new news. New data reveals testing reduces prostate cancer death by twenty percent. Men's skipping testing have forty five percent more death from prostate cancer. What to do? Come for prostate cancer screening
at Radio Surgery, New York with doctor Liederman. Easy to save lives, reduce prostate cancer death, possibly yours or your loved one. How visit Doctor Liederman thirteen eighty four Broadway Call two and two choices. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. It's easy with doctor Liederman, New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified Radiation on college. Call Doctor Leiderman two
and two choices. It's easy with doctor Liederman, Trying to save lives called Doctor Leederman two and two choices.
Welcome everybody. It's the Radio Surgery Show with doctor Gil Leiderman, MD, New York's only Harvard trained, Triple Board certified Radiation oncologist who brings you the latest cancer treatment news, interviewing world renowned cancer experts, delving to special cases, and of course answering your questions. I'm Rob Redstone, broadcasting from the WR Studios in the heart of New York City, and now please welcome doctor Leaderman.
Thank you Rob, and thank you Noan. Thank you for tuning in today and every day. Every day we see patients. Every day, I take notes, every day I come to the radio, and every day we try to learn together. We're not selling anything, We're trying to encourage education and better health care, and that's what we've been doing for decades. Actually, I want to talk about a man who is sixty
seven years old. He came to me years ago. He had prostate cancer and he had had a glease in six PSA fifteen prostate cancer years ago, ten years ago, and because of our very diligent treatment, we were able to treat his prostate cancer even though it was a higher risk, and it was a higher risk because of that PSA. Fifteen PSA is prostatic specific energen NORMALST four. Your PSA should be less than four. If it's more
than four, it's worrisome. Even it can be lessened, for you can have prostate cancer less than for and that's where I like to follow the PSA velocity. So this man was treated ten years ago with a prostate cancer. He did not want to have surgery. He knew with his intermediate risk that he had about a sixty percent chance of six SYS with surgery or standard radiation. With US it's ninety percent. So he's treated ten years ago for prostate cancer and he did great, he did fantastically.
He's cancer free ten years later, which is incredible itself. And his sex life works, and his jurinary life works, and he's so pleased about that. And then and then, of course the prostate's in the palvis, and we encourage people to get regular testing done. We know that people that get screening for prostate and colon and breast on the diseases live longer. We'll talk about that too, how to live longer. There's a recent article in the Wall Street Journals as people are spending up to a quarter
million dollars to go to longevity centers. And we can do a lot of longevity work here taking your own insurance, Medicare, Medicaid usually, so you don't have to spend two hundred fifty thousand dollars for longevity. So this man had prostate cancer successfull ten years ago, still in remission. PSA is zero. By the way, how do you know the treatment is successful? Appichie should be going down to zero and then staying down, never rising. That's how you know the treatment successfully performed.
And we follow men for the rest of their life. That's why it's so important to follow up after radic We don't advocate radical surgery because most men don't like the results of radical surgery. Radical robotic surgery means the surgeon goes in and removes the prostate. There's several different ways of doing it. When is open, which is with a knife in their hands, and now there's robotic with
a gizmo. Either way. For example, this man's success was to be about sixty percent with us, it's ninety percent with radical robotic surgery. Ninety percent of men lose their sexual function eighty percent or peeing in their pants, and then they're shortening of the penis because when you remove the prostate and urethra, the urethra the urinary tube goes right through the middle of the prostate. So it's like when a plumber, when a plumber removes part of a pipe.
The plumber has to bring the ends of the pipe together to make that pipe work, and that shortens the pipe. There's not endless pipe, just like there's not endless urethra. And so when the prostate is removed by the surgeon, the urethra is removed, that shortens the pipe, It shortens the penis. So sad to say, in my experience, I've treated thousands of men, about nine thousand men, one of
the largest experiences worldwide with prostate cancer. I could tell that most men are never told about the side effects of surgery. Many are very surprised. A lot of men who have had surgery won't really tell other men the side effects. Often men are embarrassed to say they're impotent. Men are off embarrassed to say that they're leaking urine. Men are often embarrassed to say that their penis has been shortened by radical robotic surgery. It's another reason why
people come here. One is to get better quality of life, and when is life itself, to have a better chance to be cancer free. So this man ten years ago came with a higher risk cancer. He was treated non invasive, with no cutting, no surgery, no outpatient procedures, only out patient procedures, no inpatient procedures. And then he got screening. He had colonoscopy and he was found to have a sigmoid cancer. The sigmoid is a part of the intestine.
If you think about your bottom, well, your bottom is of course the anus, and from the anus goes up the rectum, and then from the rectum is the sigmoid. And this man had a sigamoid cancer, which is also in the pelvis, and he came to me. I encourage people to get colonoscopies, and he had a kolonoscary who had a sigamoid cancer, and he wanted desperately not to have surgery. He wanted to have only our treatment. He saw a surgeon. The gastmeurologists immediately sent him to a
surgeon like a knee jerk reaction. But the patient came to me because I had been his cancer doctor for years. He came to me, says, it possible to do non invasive treatment for my sigmoid cancer. He said he's adamant against any surgery. And yes, we treated him. Though both cancers are in the pelvic areas. We were able because of our pinpoint treatment to treat the prostate separately ten years ago and then five years ago treated the sigmoid. So he's actually had two cancers in the pelvis, both
treated with radiosurgery, both treated successfully. There's no audance of cancer. We could follow up tests, follow up blood tests, follow up colonoscopy, and both cancers are intermission. I could tell you he's a very happy person having had two cancers. He had had actually blood in the stool when he was diagnosed. He was seen by gastrologists. He's biopsy positive, and he chose to have radiation only for his sigmoid cancer. That sigmoid cancer was five centimeters in size and he
was losing blood. He wanted to have radiation, and he had our treatment in the stereotectic frame, and he's done great, and he's had no evidence of recurrent cancer, either from the prostate treated ten years ago or the sigmoid colon cancer which was treated five years ago. And many many people come to us with colon cancers. You've had cancers of most type, wanting to know if there's other options that are being hidden from them elsewhere. And this is the work that we do here at Radio New York
at thirteen eighty four Broadway. It's always best to meet in person. Encourage patients to come in person with the records for consultations. Some as people say, oh, I'll just call you up and ask a question. Well, it's not like that. In medicine, it's better to see the documents.
I can tell you about ninety percent of the time when I see a new patient, ninety percent of the time the patient is not fully aware of the extent of the cancer, or the type of the cancer, or the findings that were already found before they came here. And often not the best testing is being performed. We like to get the best testing to know what kind of cancer it is and also where is the cancer. So in cancer diagnosis there's two big questions, what kind of ca answer do I have if it is cancer?
And number two, where is it? Is it only local or is it traveled. That's why testing is so important, and I see so many people, so many people, for example, women with breast cancer who are diagnosed with breast cancer, they get a mammogram and ultrasound, they get a biopsy. You know, automatically the surgeon is plending surgery on the breast without looking to see where the cancer has traveled or if it has traveled. Why do we fear cancer
when we fear cancer because cancer can travel. Cancer in the breast is not confined to the breast people with cancer. Thousands die of breast cancer because the breast cancer can travel. So we'd like to know where it is. And I think informed, educated people want to know where is their cancer. So often people seem to be rushed, rushed for chemo, or rushed for surgery, or rush for whatever without getting the best proper testing. Just this week, I saw a man who had a lump on his arm and a
lump in a arm. He had a dermatologist and a surgeon cut out the lump and turned out to be a sarcoma. Sarcoma is a cancer of the connective tissue. So there's lots of cancers. Most cancers are like breast cancer or lung cancer of the glandular tissue. But then there's cancers of the connective tissues of the bones, the fat, the ligaments, the tendons, and these are called sarcomas, saar comas, sarcomas. This man had a sarcoma. So his first doctor opened
up his arm, cut it out, and on whoops. In medical school they used to call the surgeon's peak and shriek. They'd peak and opened up the body and shriek. Ah. I didn't expect this. Ah. So this man then went to a super duper pooper hospital here in New York, and another surgeon, supposedly expert surgeon on this kind of cancer sarcomas of the arm, opened them up again and cut out about a third of his forearm. About a third of his fore arm was cut out. The doctor
did not do full testing. They did not look to see if the cancer traveled again. Like I talked about a few minutes ago, sarcoma's loved to travel locally. Sometimes they'll travel to lymphotes, but they love to go to the lungs. This man had not had a scan of his lungs and the cancer was left behind. So he had two surgeries. Now cancer left behind. Now he's going to another surgeon and another super duper hospital wants to
do more surgery. He's already lost about a third of his forearm and now the surgeon is talking about removing another third. So to leave a small amount of his arm, which obviously is going to be a major issue for him for the rest of his life. There was cancer left behind after the first surgery. There's cancer left behind after the second surgery. Now the doctor's getting a MRI, but he didn't ask for any contrast so it doesn't really make sense to get a scan of the arm
without getting contrast to better see the residual disease. And furthermore, there's been no chest CT done yet either. Yet surgery is scheduled for the next few days. The patient came to me, we've got to approved from insurance company for contrast MRI of the arm, for contrast tests of the chest and PET scan as well forthcoming. We believe it's always best to know what the extent of the cancer is before he rushes it and having surgery elsewhere. He
was rushed for the first surgery. It didn't work, he was rushed for the second surgery. His arm is very deformed. He doesn't have enough skin now to close the wound.
In fact, the wound is still not closed and they're planning to take another third of his arm out, and you can imagine what that would do to cosmetically and functionally and already has a tightness of the arm because the surgeon has removed so much tissue and now they want to remove another third and not having any knowledge of an MRI or chest CT scan before being confident about the need for the surgery, we do it the
opposite way. We'd like to know what kind of cancer it is, where it is for this man, We've already got approval of the best place in New York in my view, for imaging a contrast MRI of the arm, contrast scan of the chest, and the PET scan to know where this cancer has traveled, if indeed it has. This is the work we do, and we also offer treatment that's non invasive treatment. We have a huge experience treating sarcomas. We treat many common cancers, and we treat
many rare cancers. Why because so often standard radiation and standard surgery and standard chemo, like in this man, he's had surgery twice, including some of the biggest places around, didn't work left cancer behind. We have a huge experience treating cancers, including sarcoma's with high success where we attack the cancer and that's what we spoke to about treating the arm without surgery, without losing another third of his arm.
And this is the special work that we do every day at Radiosurgery in New York, home of radiosurgery, body radio surgery in a mess in America, Western Hemisphere, and of course in New York. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We're super convenient in the heart of New York City at thirteen eighty four Broadway, in thirty eighth Street, close to most subways, trains, buses, close to Port Authority. There's thousands of buses coming into New York every day, of course,
all the city buses. Of course, the trains go to Penn Station and Grand Central, and then all the subways one, two, three, four, five, six, ACEE and QRBDFM seven s Q, all within walking distance of our office. This is the work we do, super convenient, with a huge experience, decades of experience, forty thousand patients treated. My name is doctor Liederman here at thirty eighty four Broadway. For you if you wish, just give us a coffee of questions. It's always best to meet in person about
medical issues. We'll be right back.
Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when surgery didn't help and toxic chemo stopped working. Many come in pain. Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when their caregiver has no more care to offer. Doctor Liederman bringing innovative cancer care for decades. When the next cancer drug is not as promised, when surgery was to fail to pass, we may be able to offer you new cancer treatment options.
We treat new and recurrent cancers small or large, most anywhere in the body, even if prior chemo, radiation or surgery didn't work. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices for a free booklet DVD thirty eighth and Broadway. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted, Harvard trained, Triple Board certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices for innovative cancer treatment. Best is to
meet doctor Liederman in person. Call two and two choices two on two choices.
It's doctor Leiderman with guy talking about skin cancer treatment options.
You treated me. I had basil cell onto my cheek. A buddy of mine went through the same thing that looked like they went out of him with a melon baller. This was on my face. I don't want any scaring. I think I'm kind of handsome. I wanted to keep it that way.
So you are hats and we're going to the 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 mos surgery for their skin cancer. Why are you different.
From hearing what you report? You know, hey, you don't need to get radical deforming. Come and see what we could do. I have a lot of trust in what I've seen and what I heard, and the treatments were very simple.
If Miss America comes up to right now, what would she think about the results of your skin.
She would be able to keep her hands off. There is zero indication it was ever there. You know, I don't know that I got the chance to say, hey, thanks, doctor Leadman. I tell anybody who's going down the same path. Doctor Leederman did the absolute perfect thing. That's where you should go.
Any regrets, not at all. Call Doctor Leederman had two and two choices. Thirteen eighty four Broadway most insurances, Medicare Medicaid accepted.
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the w R Studios in the Hearts of New York 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, treat prostate cancer not invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western
Hemisphere with body radiosurgery. You can also call doctor Liederman at two and two Choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back.
We're back. I want to talk about a man who's fifty eight years old. He's single, has no children. As PSA went from six to twenty six. He had a biopsy about twelve thirteen years ago and the biopsy showed pi in, which is a prostatic intropithelial neoplasm like a pre cancer. He never had a repeat biopsy. He had a no treatment and then he had a repeat biopsy
and this is twelve and a half years ago. Showed a glease in seven cancer and at that time his PSA was forty six, so a very high PSA forty six. Normal PSA is considered it four. Like we spoke about earlier, he can have cancer at any level. His PSA went from six to twenty six to forty six. He had a gleas in seven cancer. This is twelve years ago. He was seen by doctors. They did no scans of his body. He had no treatment, no scans. He had no pain, but he was urinating three times a night.
We offered a medicine to yournate better. His weight was one forty three. Goes to gym and stable. He's fully active. He was taking stool softeners for his bowel. It had no blood loss. His arms and legs were fine. He was taking medicine for high blood pressure. The Centeparl had a clorthiaxide and for cholesterol. It had surgery on his hemorrhoids. He had surgery on his heart, and he had no
family history of prostate cancer. But he had a larynx cancer history and his mother and his brother had cancer as well, so I examined him. He had enlarged prostate. He came to me twelve years ago with a PSA forty six gleas in seven cancer. We staged him up so he had a very aggressive cancer with the PSA so high, and he chose our treatment. He just did not want to have radical robotic surgery. He wanted to do everything he could to keep his sexual life and
urinary life and his body intact. And now twelve years later, despite having a PSA forty six gleas in seven cancer high risk cancer, he is now cancer free. His PSA is zero, he's fully intact. He's very happy to come here for follow up. I check him up about twice a year. He has my contact information day or night. I encourage him, of course to get all the other testing, including conoscopies and blood testing as well, and he does that and he's been in great health. His PSA is
now zero. After our treatment twelve years ago for a high risk cancer psa forty six gleas in seven. He just did not want to have surgery. He wanted to keep his quality of life. And that's what he's done and he's doing great. Years later. My name's doctor Liederman, and I talk about a patient I saw oh more than a year ago. He came with a PSA of twenty one on finest Finestrite is a medicine some doctors give to try to shrink the prostate, but it artificially
lowers the PSA. So his real PSA is forty two. And he never had a biopsy. He never had a biopsy, and we checked him out and he sent him as well for colonoscopy, and on colonoscopy he had a six centimeter mass in his colon. He went to a gastrologist close to home, convenient as they say, and he had a six centimeter mass, but his biopsy was zero point zero six centimeters. So they took just a tiny piece of this mass and told him it was okay. So
now he's got two big issues. Number one issue is his PSA being so high forty two never worked up. He declined a biopsy and a mass and is called in six point five centimeters. So what do we do well, Number one, arrange a biopsy of the prostate. Number two, we advise a repeat biopsy of the colon mass. The doctor to the biopsy is just a pinhole, when in fact his mask was six and a half centim He is about three centimeter mass in the colon. And this is the work we do. His weights one fifty six
is five foot seven. He's active, he works construction. He's married, has one child. He was born in Jamaica, and we know in the Caribbean and the Black community, there's a high risk of prostate cancer. It's a high risk of cancer. Actually, the ambassador of Jamaica was here recently and I was told that Jamaicans have the highest rate of cancer in the world, which I believe. So for this man, multiple issues,
needs prostate workup, needs colon workup. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway, thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. About a woman who had a uterine cancer. Shit gone the usual route. She had her uterus can served diagnosed when she had vaginal bleeding. Vaginal bleeding postman apostles abnormal, some people have abnormal bleeding, even preman aposo.
She was found to have a uterus cancer. She went to one of the big hospitals in neighboring state that removed a uterus. They gave her a chemo, they gave her radiation, and within months, within months, the cancer came back. It came back in the pelvic area and then came back in the upper abdomen. Two separate areas, and they wanted to give her more chemo, and she said, hey, I've already had chemo didn't work. I already had standard radiation,
it didn't work. I already had surgery didn't work. Why should I do more of the same if something's failed, Why would I do more of the same. And her doctors had no answer for her. She came to me, and I met her with cancer and two new spots in the body. Even though she had had surgery at a big hospital, standard radiation daily over months, and then chemo, none of it worked. The cancer came back. She came
to me two separate spots. Doctors elsewhere wanted to give her chemo for stage four cancer for the rest of her life. She did not want to have chemo for the rest of her life. She came to me. We treated both of these sites years ago, and both of these sites remain in remission years later, even though it's stage four cancer. Even though doctors elsewhere wanted to give her chemo for the rest of her life, she just
did not want to have endless chemo. And lots of people when they learned the options follow the trail to thirteen eighty four Broadway like she did. She is so happy, healthy, had good quality of life. And this is what we fight for every day to spread the word. And you're welcome to be a messenger of the word. Let radio listeners save lives, meaning you can talk to people who have cancer and you're educated. Just like a student who goes to medical school gets educated, you by listening to
this program, gets educated to learn about options. When a woman like her is told all you have to have chemo the rest of your life, you may see a friend or neighbors I'm in a coffee shop or McDonald's or wherever, talking about getting chemo for us your life, say hey, there might be another way for you. There might be a better way for you. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, where we accept
most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. This is the work we do. I want to talk about a man who came to us with a gastro intestinal STROMO tumor. It's the tumor of the GI track. He had a cancer right where the rectum and the anus meet. So there's a big mess in the gastro intestine. He went to a super duper big hospital. They told them, if they do surgery, he'll have to have a colostomy, he'll never defecate normally,
he'll never go to the bathroom normally. And otherwise he can have chemo or systemic therapy for the rest of their life. And he had years. He had three plus years of chemo, and then he learned about other options, options that were hidden from him elsewhere. And he's upset that he went to a super pooper big hospital. And I can tell you, having spoken to most of the presidents of most of these hospitals, almost all of them
think that they're super duper best in the world. Anyway, he went to super duper, super duper and they offered him surgery would have altered his life. They offered him systemic therapy, which he had for three plus years. None of it worked. He came to us, We talked about options that were never told to him before, that were hidden. We see so many patients with cancer and never being
told options. And so this man finished his treatment. He's done well, feeling great, he's in remission, doing great after never being told about Doctor Liederman and radio surgery, being in one of the super duper big hospitals for three years only being told about surgery or chemo. Wow, is he happy and healthy and doing great? And he's here with his wife and himself doing great, feeling fine, back to normal in remission after never being told about all
the options. I'll to talk about another patient who comes to us with a prostate cancer only forty nine years old. So some people come in and say, oh, I'm only forty nine. I don't have any family history, I don't have this, I don't have that, I don't have pain, I don't know bleeding. Well, this man came, and he came at age forty nine from the Caribbean, lives in New Jersey, works as a manager on a golf course
in New Jersey. And his PSA was going up. PSA was going from four to eight to ten and say a PSA velocity that's more than doubled in a short period of time at a young age. And he had a biopsy that showed glease in six cancer. He had twelve cores or twelve little needles in his prostate. Six of the twelve showed cancer. He was waking up once
a night to urinate daytime. He was urinating frequently, he had no blood, his sex life work, and he came for options, as doctor Elswheer said, oh, you're so young, you should have surgery. Well, by the way, this man had two paternal uncles with state cancer and a brother with prostate cancer, so three family members had prostate cancer. And we know just if you have one family member, the risk of dying of prostate cancer increases by about
seventy two percent. So there's lots of reasons for men to be seen, lots of reasons to reduce death, reduce dying of prostate cancer by just getting checked up, and we invite you to do that too. He was being checked up, but they were allowing the PSA to get out of hand more than doubling. He came here with a PSA growing, growing, growing. He had biopsy proven cancer. He had a large prostate and he was treated. He was treated here six and a half years ago and
he's now cancer free. His PSA is zero, his sex life works, his urinary life works, there's no shortening of his body. He is very pleased cancer free, being diagnosed at forty nine. So so many men come and saying, oh, I'm forty nine. I can't have cancer. Well, not too many of us are souper, and it's better to get checked out. We'll be talking about a study soon showing how you can reduce death and increase your chance of living cancer free by getting checked up. And that's why
it's so important. My name is doctor Liederman, Radio Sort of New York, thirtwenty four Broadway, New York's only Harvard trained, Triple Board certified radiation cancer doctor. Here for you, accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid, super convenient in the heart of New York City, close to most subwoys, trains, buses, you name it, here we are. We'll be right back.
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 prostate 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 Liederman 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 Liederman for prostate cancer. Two one two choices. That's two one two choices. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Street in Manhattan. Most insurance, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Leederman two and two choices.
It's doctor Liederman with Calvin West singing and writing about his cancer treatment.
I had cancer and my pooda.
At the Radio surgeon reader choices.
I'm so bad.
Want to thank doctor Man and you.
Helia to cancer.
It's not count in two two three, wells up?
No pad your.
Band that is s too free for cancer treatment, called doctor Leederman two and two choices. Two and two choices. Call doctor Liederman.
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the w R studios in the hearts of New York City were just a few steps from the Radio Surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western
Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liederman at two and two choices for a free and four I'm go in a booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back.
We're back, and we're live. That means you can call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. One eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. We're live from now until two o'clock. So people have questions, so just give us a call about cancer issues or other issues related to the topics that we're talking about. Call us no will pick up the call. Just one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten if you wish. My name is doctor Liederman. I'd like to introduce myself
for a moment. I was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa. Went to public school University MD real medical doctor at twenty five like my brother Ted, doctor Ted Liederman's great brother and great doctor and doctor Ariel Leaderman, my son who's also MD at twenty five three Doctor Liederman's all mds at twenty five. I went on to train at Euros of Chicago, Michael Reese for three years internal medicine, took care of thousands of patients, then went to Harvard
Medical School, trained in medical home collegy. Took care of thousands of cancer patients there and remained on the staff, and then went on at the Joint Center for Radiation Therapy at Harvard Medical School, trained in radiation for three more 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, accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.
Doctor Ario Leaderman trained major hospitals from coast to coast, went to medical school, Board certified, Magna cum Latte is a great doctor. Compulsive doctor, Board certified and oncology radiation oncology. Here for you. He's loved by his patients and their family and the staff and others. Compulsive, thoughtful, caring. Doctor Leaderman here for you can call. If you're lucky, you get doctor Ario Leaderman A two and two choices. You
can call make an appointment. We accept most insurances, Medicare, medicaidor We're in the heart of New York City, easy to get to most subways, trains, buses come right to us or within a few blocks, whether it's trains, Grand Central or Penn Station Port Authority, like there's more than a thousand buses a day come in New York City blocks away from us. And although subway trains in New York one, two, three, four, five, six, ACE and QRBDFM, seven, S and Q all within blocks, so it's so easy
to get to us. We're accessible. We provide information. If you want to package your information sent to you at no charge, we would do that. Just call us at two and two choices if you want or listen, or you can come in and pick up a package. Many people come in because there's a half a million people in our neighborhood every day. It might be you or a loved one. Many people pick up two packages, one for themselves and one for their loved one. There's no charge.
It's information about various topics. Just let us know what topic interests you the most. And we also have DVDs about various topics. So a lot of information, lots of chance to communicate and learn about options that may be hidden from you elsewhere. I'll talk about a woman who came to me seventy three years old. She had a big mass pushing down her eye, so her eye was distorted being pushed down. We've got a diagnosis. We made a biopsy of this tiny little biopsy found she had myeloma.
She had maoloma in the eye, myeloma in the body. We're able to treat her, get rid of that mass, stop the pressure on her eye. Her now is eye back to normal and she's actually in remission doing well, having come here with a mass in the orbit. Remember, the orbit is a bony structure where the eye sits and a mass of cancer grown. The mass pushes and puts pressure on the eye, distorts the eye, distorts the vision,
distorts the appearance of the person. So she was tuned here years ago, about five years ago, and his remission doing great, no evidence of cancer and the mass in the eye the orbit is all gone thanks to radiosurgery New York and her trust in US, which is also so important. I'll talk about a sixty seven year old man. He's a man, he's married, He came with his wife and he had a growing mass in the lung. He
was growing. He did not want to have surgery, did not want to have a biopsy, and there's many ways you have a very good idea what's going on the lung without biopsies. Many people do not want to have biopsies the lung because they know if you put anito in there's a chance of collapsing the lung that would be in the ICU with a chest tube. This man had a growing mass pet scan positive, getting bigger and bigger and bigger, and years ago he came for radio surgery.
He did not want cutting, bleeding, biopsies, he didn't want chemo tree. With radio surgery only we were able to treat him very precisely in the stereotactic frame, which we pioneered first in America. He had a few treatments. He's now cancer free years later, and he just came back for just this past week doing great, cancer free, pleased with treatment. No cutting, no bleeding, no chemo, no ICUs, no hospitals. This is the work we do every day.
I'm talking about a fifty eight year old man born in North Africa, came from He's widowed, his wife died of cancer, has three children. His PSA was rising. He was treated here about eight years ago. His PSA was eight point five six. His Gleason score was seven. He had six of twelve course positive. He had lost weight, He was waking up twice a night to urinate. We offered him medicines, which he likes a lot. His medicines help him urinate, although and have nothing to do with
the cancer. He never smoked, he never drank. He had no reason of his cancer, and most of men with prostate cancer have no reason to have prostate cancer. So I examined him at a large prostate at T one C prostate Gleason six PSA five point eighty six, and he chose our treatment, and he's been treated. He spends half his life in Morocco, half in New York. He has children in California. And he is so happy with his treatment here. And this is the work that we
do every day. Had he had treatment elsewhere with surgery, most likely to be impotent and leaking and shortened. Here he is cancer free, with his sex life working. He had a glease in seven cancer, which is a higher risk cancer. We know with surgery or with radical surgery or standard radiation, success is about sixty percent. Here it's about ninety percent, so it has a much better chance to be cancer free here. That's why he came. And now years later, almost a decade later, he's doing great,
happy functioning, traveling, seeing his children. This is the work that we do every day to help people with cancer. And another man who came about the same time, nearly a decade ago, was biopsied by a urologist in Brooklyn. He was biopsied because his PSA was high. He demands marriage from Jamaica, has two children eighteen and twenty four. He had a eurologist who BIOPSI didn't found cancer, but they all just wanted to do surgery and he just did not want to do surgery for a glease In
eight cancer. Gleason eight is a more aggressive cancer. Gleason is how the cancer looks under the microscope. The ranges from two to ten. Two is the best, ten is the worst. Eight is one of the most aggressive with surgery. For Gleason eight cancer, surgery is successful only in about twenty percent of patients in the best hands in America. He was treated here almost a decade ago. His PSA is now zero, and I can tell you he was very happy. His quality life is intact. He's pleased about that.
And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. About another man from the caribbetess from Haiti, sixty eight year old man, French speaking. He's divorced, he has a daughter. He was seen by eurologists. He had a Gleason six cancer and the cancer was growing as PSA was getting higher and higher. He chose to have treatment then and now his PSA is zero and again he's fully intact after treatment. He's one of
the nine thousand men we've treated with prostate cancer. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway in the heart of New York City. But how about a man who's sixty five years old. This is a man who has multiple medical problems. He has heart disease, had abdominal pain. He was found to have masses in the liver. He went to one of the biggest hospitals in New York. They decided they're going to cut him open and find out what's going on
in the liver well. They already had an MRI, they already had a cat scan, They already had a Dodo Tate pet scan. A Dottate pet scan is for neuroendegrine cancers. It's a special PET scan. Petscans are among the most sensitive tests to see if the cancers traveled. They had already had the test, They already knew that he had innumerable cancers in his liver. He had surgery, which was a waste of time. It was great for the hospital and great for the surgeon, it was not great for
the patient. Then they tried systemic therapy that didn't work either. Another patient not being told about all the options, options hidden from him at one of the biggest hospitals nearby, and he chose to come over here to thirty enty four Broadway, and he came here. He came here several years ago, and we were able to treat the cancer in the stomach and in the liver simultaneously. So he had treatment simultaneously to cancer and liver cancer, and the
stomach biops he'd proven cancer. And now he is cancer free wherever we touched him. And he's doing well. His function is great. And how do we know that, Well, we just got blood tests on him. We've got new scan on him. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway and he's sad that he had this surgery and he's had that he
had systemic therapy which didn't work. But he's very happy about coming to thirtyenty four Broadway and having treatment here which took place years ago, and he's in remission doing great. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway, in thirty eighth Street, in the heart of New York City. What about a woman. This is a woman who's sixty years old. She came with her husband and sister. She was jaundice. Her skin was
yellow because the billiary system was blocked up. The billary system is a system that drains fluid to digestive juices from the liver. We need our liver to do many things, one of which is to give us digestive juices to digest our food. This woman had jaundice, her billiarom was elevated. She had a big mass and the liver. She was worked up elsewhere. She was found to have a five and app centimeter mass and the liver, and she had
a pet skin. She was offered chemo and surgery, and she was just adamant against chemo and against any surgery. They're trying to take a five and app centimeter mass out of the middle of her liver, which she was not confident on. She knew that chemotherapy for Kolango carsonoma doesn't work very well. She wondered, like I wonder why so much chemo was given, especially for diseases where it's known not to work very well. So lucky for her, she came here. She was really sick, she'd lost a
lot of weight. She was Johnda. She had a big mass in the liver, and we treated her. We treated her for Klansu carcinoma. We actually have a very high success rate treating cancers in the liver and kol aancha carstomas in particular, also primary liver cancers. There's many different kinds of liver cancers. One is cancers that started a liver like hepato cilar cancers. The bioduc cancers hepatal cilar cancers start in the liver start to her start in
the bioducts are called coolancha carcinomas. They are also in the liver area, but can be outside deliver. And then there's cancers that travel deliver metastasis. So this patient had a cool anchocarcinoma five and a half centimeters in her liver. She did not want surgery, she did not want chemo, and we treated her years ago and she was treated successfully. And I should tell you one more thing that we found the mass in her lymphanode, so she actually had
extensive cancers of stage four cancer. And both the lymphanode and the liver were treated, and she is now in remission for an advanced COLANDU carcinoma. This is the work we do, first in America, first in the Western Hemisphere, and first to New York with an extensive, huge experience. Doctor Liederman will be right back.
Numbers mean much to me because of prostate cancer. I'm Johnny Bragg's. The number two for my stepfather who died of prostate cancer and my uncle who suffered so much after prostate cancer surgery. The number fifteen fifteen years since doctor Leederman's successful treatment of my prostate cancer. The number zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor Leederman'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 Leaderman 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 called two and two choices for prostate cancer treatment. Called doctor
Liederman two and two choices. I'm glad I did you'll be number one with doctor Lederman.
Did you know that you've got choices?
That there can be a bad way?
Did you know that you've got choices? Can doctor Leader mean today? To want to choic is a much bad way? Two on two choices? Can doctor Leader me today? Did you know that you've got choices that there can.
Be a bad way?
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Today, Doctor Liederman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four, Broadway.
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the w R Studios in the hearts of New York City. Were just a few steps from the radio surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer 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.
We are back. I want to talk about a woman who came to me ten years ago. She'd been all over in New York. She saw it chest surgeons and pulmonary surgeons and orthopedic surgeons and pain management. She had pain in the left chest by her shoulder, shoulder pain, and no one could figure out what it was. And well, we worked her up, even though she'd been with all the other doctors and all the other testing and all
the other facilities. We worked her up. And what she had was called a pan coast tumor pa n coast pancoast, which is a kind of cancer in the top part of the lung which grows into the nerves, which causes us terrible pain in the shoulder area, and while was not diagnosed elsewhere, we were able to diagnose it and arrange treatment and offered treatment. And special things about pancoast tumor are number one that it's often very difficult to diagnose,
and number two, it could be very successfully treated. And we diagnosed it and we offered her treatment. She did not want surgery. She wanted our treatment only no chemo, no surgery, only radio surgery. And ten years ago that treatment was given to her and she's done great, and that cancer has been in remission. She's done great, cancer free, doing well, pleased with the success when elsewhere it just
could not be diagnosed. It's something particular. If someone has shoulder pain, it might be a kind of cancer that you may have. And this woman, this is what she had, was diagnosed and was successfully treated. The cancers never come back to that area of her body where the cancer started. This is the work that we do every day. At thirteen and eighty four Broadway. I talk about another patient who had a prostate cancer treated ten years ago. Gleason six PSA five point three. This is a man sixty
eight years old. Like there's a black man in the black community, there's more prostate cancer. One in six black men get prostate cancer, one in twenty three die of prostate cancer, so the incidence is much higher, the death rate is much higher. So he also had high blood pressure at prostate symptoms as PSA was high. He had a biopsy showed a gleas in six cancer seen by his primary doctor. He had slow urination. His way was one fifty two years before was one sixty. He had
a decreased appetite and no family history examined him. He had a large prostate and he chose to be treated nearly a decade ago, so we know he has higher risk, higher risk of having the cancer, which he has higher risk of dying, and he wanted to be treated. He was treated here nearly a decade ago and is now cancer free. PSA is zero, and he's happy and he's doing great. And this is the work that we do
every day at thirteenty four Broadway. Another man I want to talk about came with a PSA forty six Gleason seven, also treated twelve years ago with a large prostate PSA forty six. Yeah, you heard right, normal PSA's four. Gleason seven both are higher than normal. More risky cancer treated with our treatment only, no surgery, no chemo, no hormones, and is doing weight now more than a decade later,
cancer free, doing great. This is the work we do every day at thirtyenty four Broadway, and I want to talk about a new study done. So there's a new study that just came out that looked at how to save lives. And interestingly enough, one of the big newspapers recently, the Wall Street Journal, had a story on how people are spending up to two hundred and fifty thousand dollars
a year for longevity. People are spending in the United States two hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year just to go to a clinic for longevity to try to live longer, when in fact you can come here and increase your chance of living for example prostate cancer. Now, this study was done across seven countries. It was the world's largest prostate cancer screening study, called the European Randomized Study for Screening of Prostate Cancer, and it was recently
presented updated data in Madrid, Spain. They noted authors noted that the prostate cancer is the most common cause of cancer and men in one hundred and twelve countries and it's expected to double prevalence. So itse that double in prevalence by twenty forty. You're talking about just in a few years twice as many men who have prostate cancer as they do today. And it's already the most common form of cancer in one hundred and twelve countries. And
how do we detect it well? Detected by physical exam and symptoms PSA is very important and of course a biopsy. And people that get early diagnoses have a better chance to be cancer free. Not getting early diagnosis means you have a higher chance that the cancer travels. It means you have cancer for us of your life, means you have chemo and radiation and surgery and misery. It's so much better to be diagnosed early, early, And there's new data from this study to the study of thousands of men.
It's long term data showing that screening for prostate cancer can lead to a twenty percent reduced risk of dying from prostate cancer. Wow, so some people are going spending a quarter million dollars for longevity where you can come here and get checked out for prostate and have a twenty percent lower risk of dying from prostate cancer. You can come here and get checked out, and many men do. There's twenty year data. It's a first look between screening
and dying and there's a huge difference. So there were seventy two thousand men invited for screening and one in six or twelve thousand men never showed up. Twelve thousand men never showed up and skipped every appointment. These men who skipped every appointment had a forty five percent higher risk of dying from prostate cancer compared to those who showed up. Just showing up reduces your risks dramatically of dying,
and you can do the same thing here. You can come here and get checked for your prostate reducing your death rate dramatically. This is a large study showing how you can reduce death from prostate cancer by twenty percent. Men who did not show up had a forty five percent higher risk of dying from prostate cancer. So men who were never invited in for screening. Men who attended screenings had a twenty three percent lower risk of dying
from prostate cancer if they came in for screening. If you never showed up, forty percent higher death and so you can do things to save your life. Showing up coming in coming into Radisert in New York, getting checked out can help you save your life and live longer. And furthermore, there's an increased risk of being cancer free if you get screened. Similarly for breast cancer, women who get checked for breast cancer screening and proper treatment have
dramatically better chance to be cancer free. And also people who get checked for colon cancer have colonoscopy and screening and blood tests which can easily be done starting here at Radiostrity in New York have about a fifty percent less chance of dying of call and cancer, and we've talked about that today. We talked about people with colon cancer. So there's so many ways you can have longevity, especially from cancer, prostate cancer, breast cancer, colon cancer, and other
cancers by screening. And you can get screening here covered by your insurance. You don't have to pay a quarter million dollars like being promoted by some longevity clinics. So you're welcome to come here if you want. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We're super conveniently located in the heart of New York City. It's easy to get to us.
It's easy to communicate to us. You can communicate, you can email, email comes to me directly at guildgil at RSNY dot org, gil at our why dot org, our website, check us out at r s n Y dot org and call us to get information or make an appointment. It's always best to meet in person. Call us A two and two choices.
Thanks for tuning in to the Radio Surgery Hour with doctor Gil Riderman and myself. If you have questions before next week's show or want a free informative booklet and DVD, just contact doctor Liederman at two one two choices. That's two one two two four six four two three seven. That's two one two two four six four two three seven.
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 oncologists. Call two one two choices to one two choices to meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Free booklet DVD two super convenient Broadway in thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to hit your cancer. Call two one two choices two one two choices.
Prostate cancer very common. Men's cancer worldwide will double by twenty forty. Thirty five thousand men die here annually from prostate cancer. What to do? It's doctor Liderman with new news. New data reveals TI testing reduces prostate cancer death by twenty percent. Men's skipping testing have forty five percent more death from prostate cancer. What to do? Come for prostate cancer screening at Radio Surgery in New York with doctor Liederman.
Easy to save lives, reduce prostate cancer death, possibly yours or your loved one. How visit Doctor Liederman thirteen eighty four Broadway, Call two and two choices. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. It's easy with Doctor Liederman, New York's only Harvard trained, Triple Board certified radiation oncologist. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices. It's easy with doctor Liederman. Trying to save lives, Call doctor Liederman two and two choices.
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