1PM Dr. Lederman Discusses Various Treatments for Cancer - podcast episode cover

1PM Dr. Lederman Discusses Various Treatments for Cancer

Jan 13, 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 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 Leaderman to hit the cancer. He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist. Call two one two choices two one two choices to meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare,

Medicaid accepted. Free 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 Leaderman with Carrie Stubbs, who sings and writes about his cancer treatment.

Speaker 4

Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight. Cat aplane, hop, a train, don't has a tap? Call too on two choices for an appointment, Mate, So cancer, Candy said straight my cancer. It was twenty two centimeters. Now I am cancer free. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospital stay, no chemo, thearraphy. 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 the tleeder Men's top right.

Speaker 3

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

Speaker 5

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.

Speaker 6

Thank you Rob, and thank you Noah, and thank everybody. Thank you and your loved ones for tuning in, thank you for taking the time, thank you for listening, thank you for willing be willing to learn. So why is anyone tuning onto this radio show? Well, lots of people tell me it's interesting and it's fascinating, and some people listen to every show. We have one listener, Steven from Connecticut, who had this terrible prostate cancer five years ago, and

this is kind of his celebration five years. He listens to every radio show. Let me tell you a little bit about Steven. Though I didn't intend to, I will tell you about this man. So he went to his doctor. He's seventy years old. He worked for one of the biggest super duper corporations in America, one of those famous ones.

His name is on all the wherever you look, and he worked he ran around the world selling goods for this company, doing purchasing wholesale, retail around the world, import export. And he went to his doctors and he found his PSA was three. It was okay, and then it was four. It was well, okay. Usually four you'd like to get a biopsy. So that's a warning sign. If you're listening and your PSA is four, it's a warning sign. Number

one and number two warning sign. If you don't even know who your PSA is, I would suggest you come in tomorrow to thirteen eighty four Broadway and find out. Come in tomorrow or the next day, or call us for an appointment. Call up. It's a disease. Prostate cancer is a terrible disease in some communities, like in the black community. One in six Black men get prostate cancer

and one in twenty three die of prostate cancer. And other communities are not immune, white, yellow, whatever for Asian Africa, whatever you say, we see cancer possibilities and everyone and isn't it happy? When I had my colonoscopy, I always

tell everyone to get a colonoscopy. Why. I've had dear friends who've died of colon cancer because they were embarrassed to get a colonoscopy, and I set out and I had my first colonoscopy in years past, and it was one of my happiest days, along with the birth of my child. It was my happiest days that I had colonoscopy because a person cannot know what's in the colon. You cannot know, you cannot see it or feel it.

And some people will get all mixed and they think cola gard are checking for blood in the stools, the same as colonoscopy. It's not. Col of guard is a test to look for blood in the stool. That's not the same as colonoscopy. Klnoscopy is a camera's put up once your end and the patients should be prepared to clean out the bow and inspected by a great gastroenterologist and need to get all the way over to the other side from the anus all the way over to the end of the small bow. The whole thing has

to be looked at and that can save lives. People who have cancers found with kolnoscopy will have twice a success rate of people who come with cancers growing. One of my best friends collapsed at his daughter's wedding with recto bleeding. He bled out from a colon cancer at his daughter's wedding, and it was quite dramatic, and he ended up dying of that colon cancer because it already had traveled stage four before he was diagnosed. So that's

issue number one. This friend I'm going to talk about is actually a first and more of the patient who became very friendly as a man from Connecticut, and he listens to every radio show, and he went to his doctors and his PSA was four, and he said okay. The doctor said okay. The patient did all the right things. He went when the PSA was three, he went when the PSA was four, then we went up to six. So to go from four to six as a fifty

percent jump. And you're all said, oh, you're seventy years old, don't worry about it. Don't do anything about it. Don't do anything. And the patient, sad to say, believed him. Even though the patient says he was listening to my shows for the last thirty years. Well, if he was listening greatly, if he was an A plus student, he would have got a gun and left that doctor and come to radio Stude, New York I said, doctor Liederman,

my PSA is four, what should I do? And then worst of all, PSA jumped fifty percent to six, and what should I do? Well, he didn't come here, sad to say, he never came here until until Okay, So his PSA went from three to four to six and his next PSA, just without a year, was sixty. Wow, And well he got all alarmed, and all of a sudden he tried to call his primary doctor and a urologist. This is in a neighboring state, a fan fancy neighborhood where all the rich people live. You'd think they'd be

on top of their patients. Well, the patient was calling. The patient did everything right. The patient called and called and called and called, and finally he was at wits end. His PSA had gone from three to six to sixty. And he's a smart man, and he started panicking. He waited three weeks for his doctors to call him back, and no one called him back. Nobody called him back, and finally remembered two and two choices. Remember doctor Liederman on the radio, and he called me up and I said, okay,

come in the next day. And he came in the next day. And they saw him, and of course I repeated the PSA to make sure that sixty was correct. So they had gone from three to four to six to sixty. And he did it just within a few days of the sixties. Was already ninety. And I examined him. Had a big, bulky mass inness prostate, and I said, look, with a PSA of ninety, this is most likely cancer. We ranged for a biopsy. We ranged for scans of his body because we know that when you have cancer,

you need to get scanned. So when we have cancer, you need two things. What kind of cancer it is? Number one, and he had a high risk cancer, and number two, where is it? And he got scanned up in his body and he had extensive disease, multiple lymph nodes, stage four cancer, multiple lymph nodes throughout the pelvis and abdomen. And he took guard advice, so he put together a program for him even though he had a very risky cancer.

And you should know, for the typical man with a PSA of one hundred, half the people are dead within five years. Well, this man was diagnosed five years ago and his PSA is now zero. So it's a fantastic story. So let me tell you a little bit more about this man. So he started to tuning in diligently and listening to the radio show diligently. We put together a program to treat his prostrate and his lymph noodes meticulously. And he came by train every day. So these people came, Oh,

I'm from thirty eighth Street, I can't go to forty second. No. He came every day from Connecticut on the train, came to Grand Central, walked over, had his treatment, always with a smile, always with good humor. And his PSA started going down and down and down and down when it was ninety. By the way, it went from three to four to six, and then his doctor got a sixty. I got a ninety, and I asked him, Hey, don't

you want to repeat it? And he was afraid and he said, oh, it'll be good more than one hundred. And I agree it would have been more than one hundred because it was going up so fast. He had metastatic stage four cancer five years ago, five years ago exactly now, and he put together a program. And I can say that he he did trust me, and he trusted team I put together. Trust the eurologists do the biopsy, trust the radiologists, to the imaging or fantastic. And to

have a team together fantastic. And it's not like being a hospital where you're stuck with the same people in the hospital that maybe you want or don't want. Here, I can choose the best people I want. I can choose the best imaging place and the best consultants anywhere,

from any hospital or any facility, private practice anywhere. And he trusted, and he put together we put together a program, and he accepted the program, and he came every day on time, diligently, and now five years later, he's off of all treatment and he's carrying on. He's lucky enough to have a home in Michigan on the beach, beautiful beach home, and a beautiful home in Connecticut, and a beautiful wife, and a beautiful life and a very fine palate.

And he likes a good steak, and he likes a good bottle of wine, and he likes the good life. And this is what we do every day. He is in remission and ninety nine point nine nine nine percent chance he's listening to this program talking to him about his fifth anniversary, starting his sixth year with a PSA that's gone from ninety down to zero. He's had no treatment now for quite some time. We never had to

retreat anything. We treated the prostatan lymphanodes and he's been in remission, doing great, even though statistically half the men with a PSA like his five years later are dead. Those are people most likely treated elsewhere, and that's why so many men with prostate cancer. In fact, nine thousand men with prostate cancer have not only come to me, but come to me and accepted our treatment over decades. So we have one of the largest experiences anywhere, huge experience.

We're at thirty eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We work with great consultants, whether it's radiology, urology, others. Great consultants, great team, and you can see the results. The proof of the pudding is in the eating, and for this man, it PSA is zero. He's doing great. He's intact, he's living his life, he's traveling, he's a a gardener. He plans fantastic tomatoes and beans and all kinds of other things in season.

This is the kind of man. He is. It's the kind of man that you'd want to have your friend and your neighbor and your loved one, and your husband and your uncle and your son. And this is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. So to you, Stephen, congratulations on your fifth anniversary. This is the work we do. Thank you for your trust, thank you for your diligence, thank you for your camaraderie.

You're a fantastic person, fantastic husband, fantastic patient, fantastic friend. My name's 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 surgery didn't work. Call doctor Liederman. Two and two choices, two and two choices for a free booklet DVD thirty eighth and Broadway. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Harvard trained, Triple Board certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices for innovative cancer treatment. Best is to

meet doctor Liederman in person. Call two and two choices two and two choices.

Speaker 6

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

Speaker 8

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

Speaker 6

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 were let down the primrose path to have radical mos 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've seen and what I heard, and the treatments were very simple.

Speaker 6

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

Speaker 8

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

Speaker 6

Any regrets, not at all. Call doctor Leaderhiman had two and two choices thirteen eighty four Broadway. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted.

Speaker 5

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

Speaker 6

Were just a few.

Speaker 5

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

Speaker 2

We're back.

Speaker 6

We're back, and with Taba and a very interesting man. He's seventy seven. He looks much younger than he looks, about sixties. Married, has two children. He came with his wife. He has had blood pressure and he had difficulty urinating. He was diagnosed with a bladder cancer. He was seen at a super duper hospital in a neighboring state, and he was seen by eurologist over in the super duper Centro and he always just wanted to remove his bladder. Okay,

so he had difficulty urinating. He looked inside, he had a bladder tumor and you all just wanted to cut out his bladder. Can tell you when you have bladder cancer and they cut out your bladder, your life changes. You never yearnate normally again, whether it's you're nitting into a plastic bag or a tube, you're never yearnitting normally. For men who have their bladder removed, the pres to goes with it. That means the end of your sex life, the end of your erections, and it's a big operation.

It's a seventy seven year old man and they didn't even diagnosed invasive cancer. He was at super Duper's General in a neighboring state. They did not diagnose invasive cancer, So doing a removal of the bladder for non invasive cancer is wow, a big question mark. And he came to me six months ago and he was so upset. Oh, I don't want to come to New York. It's too far away. I can go down the street. I said, well, you do what you want. It's free country. You're welcome

to come here. But doing a radical systectomy removing your bladder for bladder cancer that's not even invasive without the doctor doing any scans or further biopsies, in my is wrong. Well, I said, what you need to do. You need to get scans of your body. We need to get special scans MRI scans and pet scans and a better biopsy to see what's going on in your body. And he didn't come back for four months. Coming to thirty eighth and Broadway to him, was so difficult. He'd like rather

die than come to thirty eighth than Broadway. He and his wife, Oh, it's so hard and so difficult. Oh okay, So everyone's got their own thing. And on one hand, we have patients coming from around the world. Or we have Steven who took the train every day from Connecticut. This man one trip to him and it was so difficult even to save his life. So for four months, four and a half months, he was gone and he never came back. And I wondered what this man did.

What this man did, because he never had a biopsy showing invasive cancer, and yet this urologist of the super duper hospital in a neighboring state wanted to cut out his bladder. And he finally came back to me, said doctor Leiderman, And I'm so confused, and he was. He and his wife were so confused and had to write

down in the paper what needed to be done. That he needed to get a better biopsy number one, and we need to get this MRI because in the pelvic area where the bladder and the prostate is, cat scans are not so fantastic. Also for women gynaecologic cancers, cat scans are not so fantastic because the bones create artifact. And eventually, then a month later, took him a month to get a pet scan and an MRI. Even though we arrange it with us that he come to us,

he would have had it the next day. That's how our consultants work. We have great consultants, and that's how they work in general. But no, he wanted to go close to home and futs around, and he fetched around and took another month. So now it's five and a half months and he comes back with an MRI showing metastasis to the pelvic nodes. Well, his biopsy only showed a non invasive bladder cancer, which means it shouldn't spread. But the scan, the MRI showed cancer in the lymph nodes.

There was a big question mark, you know, red lights flashing red lights. Something's wrong with this man's case. Now is it the eurologist who did a lousy biopsy or did he? Wait? So what did I do? Well, we had the mass in the lymph nodes, and we arranged a tiny little needle to go right into that mass. And what did we find? Metastatic cancer? He had metastatic stage four bladder cancer. He had advanced bladder cancer in a lymph node, even though as eurologists never found invasive cancer.

And so I ranged for him to see a urologist, an excellent eurologist with forty years experience. I've known him for most of those years, and he did a sistoscopy and he found invasive cancer in the bladder. He found a huge, massive cancer in the bladder, which the consultant is super duper at super duper General in a neighboring state missed. And then the doctor had wanted to do a radical systectomy to remove his bladder, not even knowing

the cancer had already traveled to the lymphanodes. One no, no, was not getting in adequate biopsy. Another no, no was wanting to do a radical surgery. Another no, no was not even looking to see if the cancer had traveled. Well, we took care of all those things, non invasively outpatient in minutes, and now we know he has advanced cancer, metastatic cancer, putting together a program for him to be treated. Where in the neighboring state at Hatsi Tatsi General, they

were going to remove the bladder without a diagnosis. They didn't want to look and see if the cancer had traveled. All the opposite things, all the things that we warn and where is he now, Well, now he's getting a scraping out of the bladder to clean out the bladder, and he's starting treatment and This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway with an expertise and cancer treatment for complex cases. We're not rushing anyone into having surgery. We don't rush anyone to

have anything. All we do is encourage him to learn all the options. And this man, it took him six months to learn that he had an invasive cancer to six months to learn that the doctor was doing the radical surgery, didn't even look to see if the cancer traveled that he shouldn't have been doing the surgery. That they never cleaned out the bladder. They never got a diagnosis until they came here to Radiosurgery New York. And they never knew the extent of cancer at super duper

General in a neighboring state until he came here. And you ask why do people come to radio sirt to New York? Well, like for this man, or for the man with prostate cancer. Had PSA went from three to four to six to sixty to ninety and now five years later as PSA is zero and happy and doing well. Why do people come here? They come for a reason to get a fresh second opinion, not to be railroaded

into surgery. Or railroaded into years of chemotherapy. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. And this man, he is so satisfied, and now all of a sudden, the distance from a neighboring state to thirteen eighty four Broadway is well worth it. And he is so happy that he made the trip. And he's so happy he learned what a difference it is. And he's so happy to learn that not all doctors are the same, not all treatments the same, not all

radiations the same, not all imaging is the same. He is so happy he came to thirteen eighty four Broadway. I can tell you now he's so eager to come back and have his treatment here with doctor Liederman. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. And when I go to a man who's fifty four years old, he's from Guyana, he's a black man. And I've said before, in the black community, one in six black men get prostate cancer, one in twenty three

die of prostate cancer. We treat men and women and children of every race and religion and creed and color. He came to me eight years ago. Eight years ago, he came with a glease In eight cancer PSA five stage T one C. He was a fifty four year old man at that time. He's electrician. He's married, he had nine children. He had four children in Brooklyn. He has high blood pressure and diabetes. His PSA went up to five. He had a biopsy showing Gleason eight cancer

eight years ago. He had no testing. His doctor didn't do emory MRIs and he scans. He had urination four times a night. We offered him medicines to help you with urination. And many men have prostate symptoms. One big misconception that you have to have symptoms, pain or bleeding or urination issues to have prostate cancer. Not true. It is not true. You can have prostate cancer with no symptoms, and we see so many men with no symptoms. You can have a nodule of prostate cancer in your prostate.

Let's say the size of a pee and doesn't cause you to bleed, doesn't cause you to have pain, doesn't cause you to suffer, but it's there and if it keeps on growing, it can kill you. Eight thousand men a year die of prostate cancer. Two hundred thousand men a year are diagnosed and there's huge differences in diagnosis, huge differences in treatment. This is the work that we do every day. So we offered him staging. He had low back pain, he had rib pain. His weight was

two hundred and ten pounds two years before. Now it's down to two three. So that's always worrisome. Pain is worrisome. He was a smoker. I encourage him to stop smoking. We staged them up, I examined them. A large prostate

and he had this gleas in eight cancer. And he knows that with gleason eate cancer if he had surgery in the best hands in America, if you had radical surgery or robotic surgery, success is only about twenty three percent, which means almost eighty percent of men have recurrent cancer that the surgery doesn't work. We know that radical surgery, robotic surgery in most men ninety seven percent causes damage to the sex life, damage to erections. We know that

radical robotic surgery frequently causes leakage of the urine. About eighty percent of men after radical surgery for prostate cancer leak urine with their pants are more and we know, of course radical surgery shortens the penis because there's like a plumber. For a plumber cuts out a segment of a pipe, they have to bring the ends together of the pipe to make the pipe work, and that shortens the pipe. If the urologist is radical robotic surgery on

the prostate, that shortens the penis. And most men are never told that. Most men are never told most likely the erections will be gone, that they'll be leaking urine, that the penis would be shorter, and the results are infury. He was never told with surgery, although a surgeon wanted to do surgeries at oh, you're fifty four, he should do surgery, that surgery results are only twenty three percent with radical robotic surgery. He was never told these things

until he came here. That's why so many men come with prostate cancer. Here. Many men come without prostate cancer. Just want to get checked out. And that's an excellent thing to do. Can make your day, find out what you have or what you don't have. It's a great gift to yourself for any day, birthday or other day. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway, and we'll give you copies of your records. You'll have that, you'll know what's going on and we

can pursue it. Or hopefully you have no cancer. The best news is no cancer. This is what we hope for for you and for me, no cancer, that you live a long and healthy life. You lived to one hundred and twenty. But for this man eight years ago had a gleason ate cancer. He came, he trusted us, We treated him, and now his PSA is zero. So he's so happy with us. His sex life works, his urinary life works. There was no shortening of the penis.

How do you know you're successfully treat with prostate cancer, Well, your PSA should go down to zero, not with artificially, not with hormones or other things like that, it should go down to zero by itself. This man had our treatment only, no hormones, no shots, no chemo and nomotherapy, no surgery, only our treatment, and now his PSA is zero. He's in remission, he's doing well, he's got a great

quality of life. And this is the work that we do every day at thirty eighty four Broadway, with more than nine thousand men treated over decades, high success and high quality of life. This is the work we do every day. If you have questions, come in and get our package of information. We have so much information about prostay cans. We have DVDs and booklets and comparison data, and we spend a lot of time with all our patients, whether it's prostate or breast or long pancreas liver. This

is the work that we do every day. Come to New York's only Harvard trained, Triple Board certified radiation doctor, Doctor Liederman, thirty eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. It's so easy to get to us. There's fifteen subway lines that come to US one, two, three, four, five, six, ACEE and QRBDFM, seven, S and Q. There's a thousand buses that go to Port Authority from all over the nation.

Just blocks away. There's thousands of trains actually that go to Penn Station and Grand Central, the two busiest train stations in the country are walking distance from US. Penn Station and Grand Central. Port Authority is the biggest and busiest bus station in America. And then we have all the city buses, hundreds that come to our neighborhood. We've made it so easy and so accessible by accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.

This is the work we do. If you wish, whether it's breast cancer, or brain cancers, or body cancers, primary cancers, or metastatic cancer, give us a call. If you wish names, Doctor Liederman will 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 father died days after prostate surgery. My uncle never recovered from prostate surgery. I came to doctor Leederman with prostate cancer and high PSA. Doctor Leederman explained all options, shared his and comparison results. I trusted doctor 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 Leiderman for prostate cancer. Two on two choices. That's two on two choices, thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Street in Manhattan. Most insurance, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Leederman two and two choices.

Speaker 3

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

Speaker 2

I had cancer, norma upside at the Radio Surgery.

Speaker 6

Choices.

Speaker 7

I'm so glad that we do.

Speaker 4

You wanna thank Dot.

Speaker 10

Good LANDA Mondaes and you.

Speaker 4

Heli Katzer.

Speaker 2

It's like counting two, one, two, three, wells up?

Speaker 4

No more pagad your granddaddy sent to.

Speaker 3

Free can't you treatment? Called doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices, Call doctor Liederman.

Speaker 5

Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the w o R Studios in the hearts of New York City. We're just a few steps from the Radio Surgery New York Cancer Treatment Center on Away in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman the leading cancer expert treat prostate cancer not 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 Liderman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey doctor Liderman, we're back.

Speaker 6

We are back and This is a special announcement, and that is that we're live on the radio, which means you can call. You can call right now. Call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. Noah will pick up the call. You don't have to be bashful, you don't have to be ashamed. Call now if you have a question cancer question one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. One eight hundred three two one zero seven ten, and Noah will pick up

the call. Noah will put the call through and we'll talk whatever your question is about cancer and cancer topics. That's what we talk about, cancer, cancer topics. Call us now if you want so many people say, oh, doctor Leiderman want talk about whatever. Tongue cancers or eyeball cancers, or skin cancers, or bladder cancers are going to cloudy cancers or primary cancers or metasthetic cancers. Call call us at one eight hundred and three two one zero seven ten.

That's the number for the radio station. During the show. I've given you other numbers for our office if you want to make an appointment or get a package of information. So call us now. We are live from now till two o'clock we're waiting for your call and have nothing more to say until two o'clock unless you call, except for these few words. I'll talk about a man who's eighty one years old. He's coming from Yugoslavia. He's widowed, he has five children. He came with his son and grandson.

He had a history of prostate issues and diabetes and cholesterol in heart disease, and he had a surgery for pancreas cancer. Listen to this. He went to a super duper world's famous medical center in Manhattan and he had his pancreas removed and ooops, they cut out and by a mistake, his bow. He perforated his bow and now has a colostomy because they perforated his bow when they were removing his pancreas cancer. Wow, oh wow, oh wow wow. He came, he's married, has five children. He came with

his son and grandson. He had multiple medical problems. He had this surgery in the past at a super duper hospital by super duper doctor. It's one of those risks

like we talk about all the time. He thought he was being so smart by going to super duper General and they never told him that for pancreast cancer and go see doctor Liederman, and he has a ninety percent success rate where he attacks pancreas cancer in the pancreas, without the surgery, without the whipple, without the perforation, without the colostom. He's had a colostomy now for two years and that surgery didn't work. How do I know that

the surgery didn't work. Well, I know it by several reasons. Number one, the cancer has been growing in the liver, so if the surgery worked, the cancer wouldn't be growing in the liver. So that's issue number one. Issue number two, the cancer is growing in the pancreas bed. It's growing right where the surgeon operated on this man. So wow, he went to Super Duper General. He had surgery that removed his pancreas. The cancer came right back in the pancreas.

The surgeon perforated his bowels. He has a colostomy, and he has cancer in the livery now its stage four cancer. And they told him, oh, he has to have chemotherapy for the rest of his life. Well, we know that chemotherapy doesn't work very well. In fact, it essentially always fails. He has cancer. He's blocking the kidneys. He has residual urine. He's not able to urinate completely. His skin showed liver

metastasis and hydrogephrosis. That's when the kidneys are blocked. I asked him to the doctors, a super duper general tell him that his kidneys are blocked. No, they didn't tell him anything about that. They just want to give him chemo, chemo, chemo for the rest of his life. And he came here and I met with a family just a few weeks ago, and we put together a program. We've got new scans and imaging of this body. We found the cancer and growing in the pancreas where the doctor was

supposedly removed it all. Well, it wouldn't come back if he removed it all, and it wouldn't be spreading the liver if he removed it all. But it's growing in both places. And we've got approval for his treatment. And we have a huge experience with thousands treated for the pancreas and thousands treated with high success where we attack the cancer. And that's why he's come. He's fed up with super duper General. He's super duper duper surgery, super

duper chemo. He's fed up with it all, and he's come to Radiosity in New York for pinpoint treatment, non invasive treatment with a huge experience, probably the largest experience in the world by a doctor treating pancreas and liver metastasis. And this is the work we do every day. So if you're worried about it, his I asked his son. So the mass of the pancreas went from one point eight to three point six centimeters, and I said to the sun, so how much do you think that's increase.

He said, well, it's doubling. I said, no, it's not doubling, because it's the volume. It's how many cancer cells in the mass. And of course it's to the third power of the radius, and we multiplied, and I showed the family that the third power to the radius for it to go from one point eight centimeters to three point six centimeters grew in just a few months by seven hundred percent. So it's cancers growing like crazy on chemo

with surgery at super duper general. Everything that happened to him failed, And not only did it fail, but they harmed him by perforating his bow and left him with a colostomy. So this is the work we do. This

is the work of explanation that we offer. This is where we are, and we've been here for decades, and that sergeants there easily new that for an eighty year old man, that surgery is danger surgery is dangerous anywhere actually, and we've seen I've seen that thirty seven year old man at Super Duper General die during a pancreas operation.

So this is the work we do. And you might wish if you have a cancer, cancer question, or I just want to get checked out, to give us a call at two one two choices two and two two four six forty two thirty seven. My name is doctor Liederman. Now we'll talk about a man. This man if I told you about I don't know what Chubby Checker, you would know Chubby Checker or his cousin. Well, this man's

cousin is just as famous as Chubby Checker. I can't tell you the name because patient confidentiality, but his cousin was one of the most famous rock and rollers in American history. And this man came to us eight years ago with a glease in six PSA eight point nine to prostate cancer and This man was sent to US as a sixty seven year old man. He was sent to US by one of the biggest gurologists in New

York City. This neurologist hates to cut on prostate. He hates to do radical surgery because he knows the results are so terrible and devastating. He knows that ninety seven percent of men will lose their sex life. He knows that eighty percent will be peeing in their pants. You know, is it radical or robotic? Surgery shortens the penis? And this big rock and roll cousin was sent by a big famous surgeon to me because a surgeon just knows

and he's not doing the wrong thing. He's doing the right thing by sending him to a doctor with so much experience. And eight years later he came to me. It had this biopsy proven cancer. We talked about all the options. You know, he's a rock and roller because he had a gunshot wound to his shoulder. And yeah, he's a tough life. He's working as a musician. He came to me, I examined him. He had a big prostate, and he agreed to our treatment. We talked about all

the options. Eight years ago. And how do you know prostate cancer treatment successful. Well, the PSA should be zero and stay at zero for the rest of your life. And that's what this rock and roll cousin has done. His PSA is in zero. He's doing great, he's feeling great, he's fully intact. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, in the heart of New York City.

I'm talking about a woman who came to me. She came to me three years ago with a benign tumor in her breast. She didn't even have a tumor. It was a benign condition and the surgeons wanted to remove part of her breast, and she came to me and

asked one of the options. I said, well, you don't have a tumor and you don't have a cancer, and you have a low chance of having this change to cancer over her years, over ten or twenty years, and she decided not to have any surgery in her breast because she just did not want her breast to be deformed. She came to me as a sixty eight year old woman.

She was divorced with two children, she had high blood pressure at the mammogram, and she respected the fact that I didn't push her to have surgery or to form the breast or remove a benign condition, not a benign tumor, but a benign condition. And so soh Now three years later she comes and her tooth is being pushed in her mandible, in her lower jaw, her tooth is being pushed. And her doctor got an x RA and he saw

a mass in the mandibo. And the dentist did a biopsy of this mass and he found a tumor, actually a cancer that came from the tooth. So when you think, well, teeth can't cause cancer yet ken And this was in the donogenic carcinoma. And the doctor wanted to do a radical surgery and cut off her jaw and take a bone from her leg. And they didn't even do testing. He did one non contrast scan and they didn't even look at the extent of the cancer. They didn't look in the rest of the body to see if the

cancer had traveled. It was just hot to do this radical surgery, which would have deformed her face and her jaw and taken a bone from her leg. And she remembered doctor Liederman who saw her about a benign condition of the breast, who wasn't hot to cut and was honest and straight in my view to her. And she came back three years later when she developed a cancer and the jaw from the tooth elements very rare. And I saw her just a few days ago, and yes, she wants to be staged up. She wants to see

if the cancer has traveled, and she wants options. Her surgeon didn't do testing on her. They didn't give her any options. They sent her for radical surgery. And she's just not hot to have radical surgery on her mandible. And this is the work that we do every day. We have extensive experience. Actually, I just treated a donogenic cancer and a young woman who was very deformed. They wanted to remove also her jaw and take a bone from her leg and take out all her teeth, and

she was just adamant against it. She has two young daughters, and she came to me and we treated her and the tumor's going away. It's incredible. She was always wearing a mask and wearing a mask over her face because this deformity of her mandible was so huge, and now the deformity is going away. She's an ad she says, she has a significant relationships. A beautiful woman, nice woman,

kind woman, cultured woman. And this is the work that we do treating common cancers like breast and long and pancreas and liver, prostrate, bladder, but also unusual cancers, rare cancers and rare conditions because we have such a huge experience forty thousand patients treated over decades, one of the largest experiences with patients from all over the world coming to get a fresh second opinion, not wanting to have radical surge like that man with the bladder. They wanted

to remove his bladder for no cancer. Wow. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty for Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. My name is doctor Liederman. Will 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 Liederman'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 6

Speedy recovery for defense chiefs secret prostate cancer surgery on Christmas Eve not an forming even the President returned an ambulance with pain absess bowl obstruction, secret turned disaster, sadly believed is zurologists. Like many with prostate cancer, radical prostate surgery has many complications, leakage, impotence, shortening, inferior results, death. Thousands come to doctor Liederman to learn all prostate cancer options from New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified

radiation Oncologist. Defense chief sadly believed Pie and Sky promises another reason to meet doctor Liederman about highly effective prostate cancer treatment avoiding radical surgery. Best is to meet doctor Liederman. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices, thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices thirteen

eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Called doctor Liederman two and two choices.

Speaker 5

Welcome back to the radiosurgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Giliderman at the w OUR 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 Liderman, We're back.

Speaker 6

Thank you. So often you go to the doctor and you don't even see the doctor. So many patients don't even know who they see. They don't know if to see the doctor or a PA, or a nurse or assistant or a secretary. And it seems like they're not wearing badges, they're not introducing themselves. So many people don't know who's giving me advice. So many people are doing biop season procedures. Wow, So I thought I'd take a minute to introduce myself. My name is doctor Gil Liederman.

I am a Board certified cancer doctor, actually triple board certified. I was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa. Went to Pop Schools Medical School MD at twenty five. Like my illustrious brother, doctor Ted Liederman MD at twenty five and my wonderful son, doctor Arial Leaderman MD at twenty five. There's three doctor Liederman's and the same family, all MD, real medical doctors, really seeing patients, all medical doctors at age twenty five, all special us here. We are here

for you if you want. Ariel Leaderman works at thirteen eighty four Broadway in Radio. Started in New York. He works side by side with me. He's fantastic. Patients are lucky, lucky to see him. He's warm and caring and smart and compassionate and meticulous and thoughtful. He's loved by his patients and families and staff. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway

in thirty eighth Street. If you're really lucky, called two and two Choices, why do we make our name two and two Choices, Well, it's so you can remember two and two has Manhattan and Choices, because you have choice. Like we've talked about today. Woman didn't want to have a mistectomy, she came here. The man didn't want to remove his bladder came to here. The man who had lost his kidney elsewhere super Duper General didn't work, came to us for treatment that work, the only treatment that

did work when Kimmel didn't work for four years. The man who had his pancreas removed at Super Duper General and the cancer came right back in the pancreas and they perforated his bow hees with a colostomy. People come here for a fresh second opinion, whether it's for this cancer of the tooth or pancreas or prostate. This is the work we do. You can see doctor our real Liederman, Board certified great doctor at thirty eighty four Broadway, accepting

most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. You can see me if you want, Doctor Gil Liederman. After MD I went to University of Chicago Michael Reese trained internal medicine, board certified, treating thousands of patients, went onto Harvard Medical School trained the prestigious Dane of Harvard Cancer Institute, treated thousands of patients, Board certified State on the staff, and then went on at Harvard Medical School the Joint Center for Edition Therapy years

more trained fully saw thousands of patients, Board certified. The only triple board certified Harvard trained radiation doctor in New York, one of the few in the world. Here for you, accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid, thirteen eighty four Broadway, Broadway in thirty eighth Street. There's so many ways to get to us. There's the biggest bus stations, train stations in America only blocks from us. All the buses, subways. It's so easy. We made our office accessible to you so

you don't have to drive. You can drive view one. You all stick the bus or the subway or walk. It's so accessible. We have lots of information to send you. We have book that's and DVDs. So many people, because there's more than a half a million people that come in our neighborhood every day, you can come to our office and pick up information for yourself or your loved one. We know that radio listeners save lives. You can save

lives if you're someone talking. If you're at a restaurant or a grocery store and someone's talking about cancer, you may say, hey, you might want to get a fresh second opinion with doctor Liederman and might change your life. Like Steve from Connecticut, who came when his PSA went from three to four to six to sixty to ninety and now five years later as PSA zero, for example. This is the work that we do every day at

thirteen eighty four Broadway. Now I want to talking about a man who's seventy one years old, he's married, he came by himself. He had a lump on his nose and had a base of cell cancer, and he was seen at a super duper place in a neighboring area of New York and they told him, well, you got to have radical surgery. You have to have mo's. You're going to cut off the end of your nose. Mo's for your basi cell carcinoma the nose. And he just didn't want his nose cut off. And I can tell

you I treat so many people. You listened to guy earlier. He also had a cancer on his face, and he just didn't want to have hit part of his body thrown in the bucket and also part of the body where skin cancers often occur around the eyes, nose, ears, mouth, which is very deforming. You can imagine how this man would look a part of his nose was cut off, the tip of his nose. And he came to me years ago, years ago for a basis ol carcinoma, and

he came with a letter. He came with a letter from his dermatologist saying that surgery was indicated for his cancer. He has to have most surgery. That's what he was told. He's a truck driver who lives by himself. He was born in New Jersey, lives in Long Island. And I saw him in a mass one and a half centimeter masks on the tip of the nose, it was all sort of it was deep, it was discolored. It was

a basisil cancer. And I saw him this week. Patients come for regular follow up, and they should come for regular FOLP and he is so happy at outpatient therapy, non invasive treatment, no cutting, no bleeding, was treated years ago, his cancer free, and he is so happy he came here for his skin cancer in which we so many skin cancers. Why because said to say, there's three million skin cancer year in America, and most dermatologists push for mo's,

which is radical surgery. It's like excavation surgery. And most people that I see, when they learn about the options, don't want MOS. The problem is that most people that I see are never told about options. I of course believe, as you've heard before, believe it's our obligation to educate the patient. That's why I'm here with you at this moment now, at this moment, trying to educate you. So one in so many patients three million a year have skin cancers. So that's so many over years, there's so

many cumulative people who had skin cancers. And often people that have one skin cancer have more than one because it's the same complexion often fair complexion sun exposure, but not only. Bob Marley died of melanoma the brain. He sat on his deathbed and he said, you know, money is great, but it can't buy health. And so here we are trying to provide health and education to everyone who wants to listen. This is the work we do. Now we'll talk about a man who's here with me.

He's seventy years old. He was sent by the same urologist. Had a T three, so very advanced prostate cancer gleas in seven cancer. PSA was fifteen, so it's a higher risk cancer. PSA's fifteen gleas and six. And we know with surgery results are terrible with PSA fifteen gleas and seven cancer. And he came to me years ago. He came six years ago. It had colonoscopy. He had family history with colon cancer. He had not had a colonoscoy in more than ten years. I advise that he was

waking up a nighttime to urinate. Daytime. Your nation was okay. He was losing weight. His way was one eighty two years ago. Now one's seventy. And I examined him and he found a huge nodular prostate socus rock hard and he came to me six years ago with prostate cancer and he chose our treatment and now his PSA even though he had a very advanced cancer with a high PSA and high Gleason score and a high stage, he's now cancer free. His PSA is zero. And this is

the work we do. We are so happy for him, and I could say he is so happy for himself, and this is the work we do. In fact, the vast majority of the patients that we treat are cancer free for prostate cancer. Now we'll talk about man just in a minute. He's a churchman. He resides in the church. Church people take care of him. He had his stomach cancer. He tried to deliver, and he had a cardiac valve. He had chemotherapy and surgery. None of it worked. He

came to us with stage four cancer. Gaster cancer came more than a year ago. We treated the stomach and deliver all together and he's now cancer free. And he came just weak cancer free. The radiologist are shop. It's unbelievable. Stage four cancer treated only with radio surgeries have an extensive experience over decades. It's why people come. Whether you have cancer or not. If you have no cancer, you want to get checked out, give us a call two and two choices two and two two four six forty

two thirty seven get checked out. If you do have cancer, whether it's newly diagnosed or recurrence, give us a call. There may be treatment options that could be hidden from you elsewhere. So many people learn so much by meeting in consultation with doctor Liederman. God bless you and thank you and talk soon. Tell one hundred and twenty.

Speaker 5

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 on 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 to one two choices to meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Free booklet DVD two 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?

Speaker 6

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 choice is a much bad way too wantto choices? Conductor?

Speaker 6

The don mean today?

Speaker 10

Did you know that you've got choices?

Speaker 6

That there can.

Speaker 4

Be a bad way?

Speaker 10

Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor? They don't mean today to want to choices a much bad way to want too choice, say conductor, leader.

Speaker 6

Mean 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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