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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, two one two choices to meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Book with DVD two super convenient Broadway in
thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to hit your cancer Call two one two choices two one two choices.
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 Liederman 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 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 on Callway 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 Noah, and thank you for tuning in today and every day. We're here in the radio every day. Why to learn to be healthier, to be smarter, to help ourselves, to help our loved ones in case God forbid something happens when it's almost always unexpected. Most medical issues are almost always unexpected. You're prepared, you've learned, you've done your homework, and you're ready to
understand and how to behave. If someone comes in and say, oh, you have to cut off your breast or your kidney or your prostrate, or your bladder or your lung or your nose or your ear or your mouth or wherever you can, well, you can say, okay, I'll listen to you, and in the back of your head you can say, I'm going to go see doctor Liederman because I know there's options, and I know often the options are hidden many places outside of doctor Liederman's radio Surgery office, and
we're proud of how we inform patients about all the options. And it's very easy for us to inform patients about all the options. It's on our walls, it's on our booklet, it's on our mind, it's on our agenda. It's what we do every day here at twenty four Broadway. And I want to start out with an example of how a woman in Florida, beach, bunny woman, beautiful woman, and her beautiful husband, they love the sun, and they love their body, and they love their life, left Florida and
came whatever twelve hundred miles. However, Lafard is to have care here and so off we hear it. People say, oh, I live on forty second Street. I can't make it the thirty eighth street. I live in New Jersey. It's so far away. And here's a family who probably the woman's life was saved because she went that extra mile age. I think it was about twelve hundred miles. She lives on the beach in Florida. Let me tell you her story. Nice woman, kind woman, sixty eight years old. She's married
with her husband. She's very devoted woman to her husband and her family she had. She came to me recently. She had missed five years of mammogram. She's a DEES daughter. That means her mother was given dies. Oh, and the mother was pregnant with her and that has led to tumors. But that's not really why she's here today. She told me that she's a DS daughter and you can look it up. We can talk about it another time if
you wish. Anyway, after a five year gap, I guess it's because of pandemic and other things and being busy like so many people are. The mammogram showed a non palpable right breast twelve o'clock position tumor. So this is Whoman and all that means is medical talk that she could not palpate it. The doctors could not palpit it. But on mammogram and the right breast, if you imagine, the breast looks like a clock, and it's how doctors speak, with the nipple in the middle and wherever the hands
would be. So at the top of the breast twelve o'clock position, there was an abnormality. And she saw a sergeant in Florida and she had an MRI and MRI showed a second lesion and the MRI was done after the biopsy. The biopsy resulted in a hematoma, so it was bleeding in the breast, but there was a second leasion separate from that, and was recommended that she gets biopsied for that. She was highly suspicious for a second sight of cancer. She'd had no cat scan, no PET scan,
no MRI. The pathology showed an invasive lobular cancer. Lobular is how it looks under the microscope. It was a real cancer, invasive cancer, not a pre cancer, not a DCS cancer, a real invasive cancer. I means she was invading into the fat tissue of the breast. And when the pathologist looked at it, there's a Nottingham scale from I guess three up to nine, and she had a Nottingham six set of nine, so it's a more aggressive tumor.
The architecture was three of three, nuclear was two of three, mytotic was one of three, and there were multiple cores positive. And then she got the MRI after the biopsy and MRI showed a centimeter away a second leash in three melimeters and it was suggested to be biopsied, and that's where she left it, and her doctor wanted to do biopsy it. He wanted to actually remove her breast by one more thing I didn't tell you, and that she's
had the breast implants in the past. So she's a woman who's concerned about her appearance and concerned about her health. Her weigh to is one hundred and seventeen pounds, two years ago was one twenty. She's five 't five. She's never smoked. She has no cough, no shortce of breath. She also, like so many people, has not had a colonoscopy, and we talked about that. She said she had a cola guard. Well, what is the difference between a cola
guard and a colonoscopy. A lot of people think, oh, it's an equal test and you can skip all the preparations, skip the colonoscopy. What is calonoscopy, Well, some people want to hear what that is. Colonoscopy is when gast neurologists puts a camera up the gastrointestin track from the anus, rectum, sigmoid descending transverse, ascending all the way over the secum and it's probably the best way to find early colon cancers. And it's the best way to probably increase the chance
of not dying of colon cancers. And I can tell you that I've had several dear, dear friends physicians, both who had a reluctance to have colonoscopy. Both ended up. A man, famous doctor from South Africa, a good friend of mine, studied with him in overseas and I studied with him here and worked with him. He collapsed on his daughter's wedding day from bleeding. He started bleeding from the rectum. He collapsed on the during the ceremony during
his daughter's wedding. He had never had a colonoscopy. He was too embarrassed, he was too shy, and it cost him his life. Cancer grew. He didn't have any inkling of that. The cancer grew, he started bleeding, and only when he was bleeding massively did he get a diagnosis. And another doctor, a friend of mine from Italy, also never at colonoscopy and presented with bleeding and metastatic cancer. Also both died after years, but died of their disease. And I can tell you that there's many ways to
save lives. And I'm actually putting together a new notice to the public about how to save lives, and there's many ways to save lives. Some people spend a quarter million dollars for longevity clinics. There's longetic levity clinics that charged people up to two hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year to live longer. When you can come here and get tests done to live longer, you can get checked. Men who get checked for their prostate have a tremendously
greater chance to be alive cancer free. Men who don't get checked for their prostate have a tremendously increased risk of death forty five percent higher death. Same is true for colonoscopy, same is true for mimography. And that's why we're talking about this. As a woman who had I guess inadvertently but knowingly skipped five years of mammogram. She didn't think it could happen to her. She skipped her
colonoscopy also. So she's down there in Florida and the surgeon wants to remove her breast because he said there's two lesions and that's it. And they act like the breast is totally unrelated to the rest of her body. And we see this every day. I can tell you what happens in New York and around America and around the world. We see it every day. I just had a family, similar family patient who flew in from Haiti, very elegant French woman flew in from Haiti, who also
came with a breast cancer, very extensive breast cancer. Never thought what happened to her was worked up in Haiti and as if the breast is not part of the body. So this woman, this speech bunny, this sixty eight year old woman who's always kept herself in good shape except for not getting mammograms, except for not getting kolenoscopies, comes to me and I talked to her and her husband.
I said, well, look, I know your doctors are great in Florida, but sometimes cancer travels and if you don't look, you'll never find it. And for my patients, we always like to know two things really to start with. One is do you have cancer? And if so, what kind? And second is where is it? Has it traveled? So I suggested that to her and her husband and she agreed, and she agreed. We arrange for a pet scan to be done immediately. Remember she'd been worked up for months
in Florida. She comes to me, and we immediately get scanned over her body, also blood tests and blood markers so that people know what's going on. And surprise, surprise, surprise, not only did she have the breast cancer, but she had a second tumor, the second mass in her kidney that was four centimeters almost two inches. And she showed
we arranged, I arranged a test here. It was done here, and then she went back to Florida to show her doctor to get her own doctor's advice, and her own doctor said, oh, just ignore it, just ignore a four centimeter mass and the kidney. Wow. That was her doctor, her long standing doctor, her family doctor, internest board certified doctor, told her, we found a mass in her kidney, and her doctor told her just to ignore it. Wh oh wow, oh wow,
oh wow. So where does it stand now, Well, she's here now getting treatment for her breast because she does not want to lose her breast. She's very sensitive to her body. She was never offered treatment without deforming surgery elsewhere, and she went multiple places elsewhere. I tell you that she used to in the past live in New York, so she knows New York hospitals, New York doctors. She's lived in Florida and she also in Massachusetts, so she
knows doctors and facilities around the country. She came here and she had care like she had never had before. We staged up the breast, we staged up her body, We got marker tests, We arranged for a biopsy of the kidney, which I will tell you was ninety nine point nine percent kidney cancer. We even talked to her about treatment options, and I've encouraged her to be seen
by surgeons. And you should understand that the usual treatment for kidney cancer in America is to remove the kidney or part of the kidney, and I haven't spoken to her yet about it completely, but she understands treatment options. We've spoken about all the options, whether it's surgery or other therapies, and she also was told about radio surgery. And I believe, just like for the breast, she likes the idea of non invasive treatment that does not violate
her body. She's very respectful of her body. She's very cognizant of her body, and she would like her body intact. So currently where do we stand, well, she has this breast cancer. Both of those spots are being treated in the breast she does not want to have surgery, she does not want to lose the breast, she wants to have radiation. Here with doctor Liederman at thirty four Broadway, we have lots of information to send you out breast cancer. Many many women we see just do not want to
have surgery or mestectomy on the breast. Many women also don't really want to have chemotherapy either. So that's one issue. And the number two issue is this mess on the kidney, which we believe is most likely cancer, arranging a biopsy which should be a tiny little needle. And that's also so different. The usual treatment in America is not to get a biopsy, just to go in and do surgery to remove the kidney or the mulk bulk of the kidney. And personally, I don't believe in that. I don't believe.
What do you do for a patient who has surgery and the next day the doctor comes in and say, oh, missus X, we have good news. The mass wasn't cancer. And that's what the doctor's saying. Meanwhile, the patient's thinking, but doctor, you removed my kidney, You threw it in the garbage. Now I don't have my kidney anymore. Woul didn't make a lot of sense to get a biopsy first, to know what you're dealing with first, especially when the
biopsy can be done so easily and so readily. But sad to say, in America, the usual practice for kidney cancer is surgery. That's so common, so common, and so common. I know often doctors say, well, we can move part of the kidney, and I can tell you my experience. Most commonly, the entire kidney is removed. And what does that do to the patient? Well, number one, it removes half of the kidney function. And number two, there's something called a field defect. She was not a smoker. This
one was not a smoker. But there are many kidney cancers related to smoking, which is another good reason not to smoke. And if you're a smoker, stop And if you're around smokers, you should invite them to go either stop smoking or smoke somewhere else. I have so many patients with kidney cancer whose parents were smokers, and they grew up in a household where both parents were smoking, and they have smoking the house and smoking the car,
and smoke wherever they went. I have some patient to tell me the walls of their house were yellowed from the smoke of their parents. So if you can get away from smoking and get away from smoke, try to encourage others to stop smoking. And like this woman, surprise, surprise, she had no symptoms. She had no bleeding. What are symptoms of kidney cancer, Well, symptoms could be blood in the urine, abdominal pain, weight loss, and she had really
none of that. So we were lucky, I guess that she came here, and she was lucky in a way that she came to a doctor who believes it's important to study the whole body. That just because you have a cancer and the breast doesn't mean it's not somewhere else or you have a second cancer. And we see that so often, and that's true for most patients and most cancers, whether it's breast cancer, lung cancer, or pancreas cancer,
liver cancer, or a bladder or prostate whatever. It is just so common in our experience to find a second cancer that's ignored by almost everybody else. So for this woman, and she's looking to be successfully treated to the breast, she's looking to be successfully treated to the kidney. At this time, she does not want to have radical surgery or any surgery on the breast or the kidney. And of course we're doing all due diligence for her, and she's doing all due diligence for herself as well as
her husband. She has copies of all the scans and reports of a courage to go see anyone she wants, whether it's surgeons, medical, on collegist, her own doctor. Sad to say, her own doctor is the one who told her just to ignore it, which is so devastating and so frustrating. And this is the work we do. Yeah, sometimes we make waves, and sometimes maybe the doctor doesn't like me because we found this mass that no one else found, and then when it was found, the other
doctor said to ignore it, which to me would be ludicrous. Anyway, this is doctor Liederman, thirteen eighty four Broadway, the only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation doctor in New York, one of the few in the world except most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We see three groups of patients. We see people who want to get checked out. And as I told you just a few minutes ago, if you get checked out for prostate cancer, you'll reduce your death rate by twenty percent.
You'll avoid that unnecessary death forty five percent. Same for women who have mammograms and breast exam you'll reduce your death rate by fifty percent. Same for colonoscopy. So many cancers you can come and get checked out if you wish, You're welcome to come in Category one to come in for a checkout. Or you have symptoms like you have a lump in the breast, or you have bleeding or weight loss or pain, those are symptoms number two category
you've just been diagnosed elsewhere. That's what this woman had. She was diagnosed elsewhere in Florida, and she decided to travel one thousand miles to get care here that was not available anywhere else to the best of her knowledge. And so many people just don't understand that each for so each doctor have their own talents and their own characteristics and their own qualities. And that's why so many people with cancer or suspicion of cancer come to doctor
Liederman at Radio Surgery, New York. And category number three, you have cancer and you're being treated elsewhere and it's just not working out for you. The cancer's not going away. The chemo or whatever treatment, radiation or surgery is not tolerated and you're just not satisfied. We see so oft and so often people are getting treatment that's not helping. So often I'll see a patient, I'll go through the records and for the last year they've had chemo and
the cancer. Every scan is showing the cancer is growing. And the patients tell me, hey, no one ever told me the cancer is growing. I said, well, but here's the report. They said, I don't understand it. I said, did your doctor tell you have stage four cancer it's growing? And so often they'll say no, I never heard that. I never heard that. So all this information you can easily get here at radio through to New York. If you want, give us a call now or whatever, this
evening or tomorrow or never, whatever suit you. If you wish to contact us, call us at two and two choices two and two two four six forty two thirty seven. That's two and two choices two and two means New York City and choices, because we believe you really have choices, like this one with breast cancer. She had a choice to stay down on Florida, have major surgery on her breast,
or lose her breast. She was pushed for a chemo, she just did not want that, and then she came here and to change your life, hopefully by successfully treating her breast, that's what we're aiming for. And by finding the second mess in her kidney, most likely kidney cancer, that changed her life. So again, the three categories of people who come here. People who want to get checked out or have symptoms. You don't have a diagnosis, but you have pain, bleeding, lumps, bumps, weight loss, or just
want to get checked out. No symptoms, you just want to get checked out. You haven't had colonoscar but you haven't had mammograms, you haven't any knowledge of your PSA. You want to get your body checked out. That's category number one. Number two, recently diagnosed with cancer and you want to hear about all the options, including options that may be hidden from you elsewhere. And category number three, you have a cancer. You're getting treatment and it's just
not working. You're not getting better, scans are worse, you're worse, You're not tolerating the treatment. This is the work we do. My name is doctor Liederman. 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 the fail to pass, we may be able to offer you new cancer treatment options.
We treat new and recurrent cancers small or large, most anywhere in the body, even if prior chemo, radiation or surgery didn't work. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices for a free booklet DVD thirty eighth and Broadway. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted, Harvard trained, Triple Board certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices for innovative cancer treatment. Best is to
meet doctor Liederman in person. Call two and two choices, two and two choices.
It's doctor Liederman with guy talking about skin cancer treatment options.
You treated me. I had basil cell onto my cheek. A buddy of mine went through the same thing that looked like they went out of him with a melon baller. This was on my face. I don't want any caring. I think I'm kind of handsome. I wanted to keep it that way.
So you are hats and we're going to Olympics. Usually in America there's three million skin cancers a year. Ninety nine percent of people are letdown the Primrose path to have 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 do.
Any regrets, not at all, called doctor Liederman at two and two Choices, thirteen eighty four, Broadway, Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted.
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the WR studios in the hearts of New York City were just a few steps from the radio surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, 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 in the
Western Hemisphere with body radiosurgery. You can also call doctor Liderman at two and two Choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liderman, we're back.
We're back, and I want to talk about well patients who come and they're exposed to doctors that have acts of O mission and acts of commission. So what's acts of O mission? Well, it's not doing something. What's acts of commission, Well, it's doing something. So for example, this lady from Florida I talked about, Well, acts of OH mission, didn't get cancer markers, didn't stage er up, didn't look at the rest of the body. That's OH mission. There were acts of OH mission. And we see that so
often and women with breast cancer. But in fact we see it with the almost every disease that we see that doctors often not all, of course, but often just don't get staging up to see if the cancers traveled or didn't get the best test or got a quick test or tests. It's not readable. That's an act of o mission. So now I want to talk to an act of commission, and I'm going to talk about a man. He came to me, a very intelligent man. He's fifty two years old. He's from Jamaica, by the way, Jamaican
and Caribbean. I've been told the ambassador from Jamaica told me there's a highest rate of cancer in the world. Asked why, No one knows why, but there's a lot of cancer in the Caribbean, lots of cancer. This is a fifty two year old man, so pretty young. He has high blood pressure, cholesterol, has diabetes and multiple medications. As a family history, his grandfather had prostate cancer. Not a first to be relative, but his grandfather. He was seen by his family doctor as PSA was three and
he was sent to a urologist. And now the eurologist says it's mandatory to do a biopsy of his prostate and the urologist is pushing him for this biopsy. And the man is pretty smart, and he does have symptoms. He has noctoria, which is knock means nighttime in urie means urinating, so he has noctoria seven times a night. He also has diabetes. He's also taking other medicines for his diabetes besides met foreman. And he has some urgency when he urinates, but no bleeding. He has no headaches.
He's two hundred and twenty six pounds two years ago the same with the height of five foot eleven. He's an ex smoker, so all these things hurt the body. Being two hundred and twenty six pounds with that height hurts the body. Being next smoker hurts the body. He's also his high blood pressure and cholesterol which can hurt the body. This man works construction for the city. He was born in Jamaica. He's married. And I examined him, and I examined his prostate. He had no nodules in
the prostate. So he came to me with the question, and why is my doctor pushing me to get this biopsy? I don't understand it, he said, And I said, well, why don't we check you out and see what's going on. So we checked him out. He'd already had a PSA elsewhere, and I was told his PSA elsewhere was three. And then he needed a PSA with me just a couple of days ago, and this PSA was low, and it
was low even though he had a urinary infection. I'd just been seen by eurologists who wanted to do a biopsy, and doing a biopsy in the face of an infection is a bit of a no no. But the urologist didn't neurologists, a doctor who specializes in the urinary system, didn't do a test to see if the patient had an infection. So he came here, We did a test. He had infection. Sure enough, he had infection, which also
could make the PSA rise. But even with his PSA of three point two, that still wouldn't be high enough to get a biopsy, and most likely after he's treated for the infection, and I indeed treat him for infection and his MRI there's a scale of how abnormal the MBI looks from one to five, and his MRI was normal. So I had a normal MRIN and a normal PSA, and he had a urine infection, even though he's seeing by urologists who specialties the urinary system, who's pushing him
to do a biopsy. So here's a man who comes to me decide, hey, what to do, And they said, in my view, there's no nodule, the MRI does not show anything suspicious, your PSA is relatively low, you don't have a first degree relative. It was me I would say, hey, let's hold off. I don't see a reason to do a biopsy now, especially in the face of an infection. We can treat the infection. In fact, we are treating
the infection. But here's a man being pushed and being given bad information when in fact there's no need to do a biopsy. So that's an act of omission co one commission to do a biopsy. It's not needed. Why would a doctor do a biopsy it's not needed. You can tell me. You can call in. We have a phone lines open. You can call in and talk to me about why do you think a doctor would be doing a biopsy when there's not really a reason to do a biopsy. I told this man there's no reason
to do a biopsy, that he's in great shape. But he needs follow up every man, And again I talked about it a few minutes ago. If you get checked out for process, just going for screening, going for checkups will reduce your death rate by twenty percent. So every man who's listening, and everyone who knows a man who's listening, should get their man to the doctor or come here.
Thirty to eighty four Broadway, Doctor Leaderman. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid, and we know just by showing up you have a twenty percent greater chance to be alive, and you'll have a forty five percent less chance of dying than men who ignore it. And I can tell you there's so many men who ignore themselves and they harm themselves. There's a forty five percent greater death in men who do not get checked up. So just if you think you're
so smart by ignoring your medical care, think again. And you may wish to come here, You're welcome to do so. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We're in the heart of New York City. It's easy to get to us.
We're close to the most trains, Penn Station, Grand Central, most subways one, two, three, four, five, six, ACE, and QRBD seven s and Q and all the city buses that come in Manhattan, and also all those inner city buses go to Port Authority, which is just a few minutes walk from us, so it's easy to get to us. There's not really a good excuse not to get checked. Whether you're a woman and need mammograms or colonoscopies or paps mirrors, there's reasons to check us out, say men,
whether you need a colonoscopy or PSA. And if you're a smoker or ex smoker, you may wish to get a scan of your chest to make sure you don't have a lung cancer. You can check for your lungs and screening for the lung will also reduce your death rate. You don't have to pay two hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year like some people do to longevity clinics. You can come here. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.
This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eight threet in the hardinw York City. And one more thing I should tell you, and that is you can call us. We're live on the radio from now till two. Call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. One eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. You can call now. Noah will pick up your call. You
can ask your cancer question, whatever it is. Sometimes people say, doctor Liederman, why don't you speak about this or that or the next thing? Call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten from now till two and one more thing. I should tell you that we're on the radio every day on WR Every Sunday we're on from eleven am to twelve noon and from one and two pm. Every Saturday, we're on from eleven to twelve, one to two, three to four, five to six in
the afternoon. Again, Saturdays were here from eleven am to noon. Saturdays, we were in the afternoon from one pm to two pm, three pm to four pm, and five to six pm. And then every night and so many people like to go to sleep with doctor Liederman. Many people like to wake up with doctor Linderman. Many people like to work with doctor Liederman. Every night at midnight and then Saturday
night going into Sunday morning. We're here from midnight on till four with lots of programming, lots of things to learn. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway, trying to help. We're trying to educate, We're trying to help so that you live longer. Like this woman who came from Florida and everything has changed in her life because she has come, and it's changed in a good way. And I believe that she and her husband are very grateful and I appreciate that. Again.
My name is doctor Liederman, Cancer, Doctor, thirty four Broadway. You're welcome to come for a checkup or for cancer advice. If you've been diagnosed, or if you've had cancer and treatment's not working or not tolerated, or you need some new ideas that may be hidden from you elsewhere. Give us a call at two and two choices two and two two four six forty two thirty seven. We'll be right back.
It's Johnny Bragg's talking prostate cancer. Twenty years ago. I came to doctor lead him In with prostate cancer. It was serious. My stepfather died days after prostate surgery. My uncle never recovered from prostate surgery. I came to Doctor leader Man with prostate cancer and hi PSA doctor Liederman explained all options, shared his and comparison results. I trusted doctor Leederman twenty years ago. Today I trust doctor Liederman even more. My prostate cancer is gone, my PSA is zero,
my quality of life is great. You can trust doctor Leederman too, like me for over twenty years. Call doctor Leederman for prostate cancer. Two 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.
It's doctor Liederman with Calvin West singing and writing about his cancer treatment.
I had cancer at the radio surgeon reader, Oh well, chas, I'm so glad.
We do.
Wanna thank doctor Lenomna.
And you.
Helio cancer.
It's not counting two three, Well up.
Your brand.
That is so too.
Free 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 o 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 invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and she'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'll talk about a woman. Remarkable woman, remarkable story. She came to me as a sixty five year old woman nearly ten years ago. She's married, she has three children. She worked, she works part time. She was fine until about ten years ago. She up left arm pain. She had pain in the arm and her armpit in her shoulder.
She went to her doctors. They gave X rays. They give antibiotics, which is I should tell you that treating with antibiotics when there's no diagnosis is wrong because you get superinfections and to look for the chest with X rays is usually not that helpful. She had progressive pain. She was worked up at one of the big hospitals
in the neighboring area. She had a cardigram chest X ray, she had a brain scan, she had a neck scan, she had a spine scan, she had a shoulder scand AMRII, the shoulder EMRI, the spine EMRI, the neck and all the tests were negative until she finally had an MRI which showed a mass in the lung. By that time, she had what was called ptosis, where the left eyelid dropped and she had pain in the arm and shoulder. She had a mass growing from the lung into the
media styinum, which is the center of the chest. It was also growing into the corodid artery and into the aortis. It was a very, very, very extensive cancer. She was seen by doctors close to home. She went to doctors in their big hospitals in the area. She had a biopsy that showed non small cell cancer. She had pulmonary function tests. She saw radiation doctors, and she saw other doctors, and yet no one could come up with the plan for her, and so she came here. She did not
want chemo and she did not want surgery. She had a history of tonsils and c section and she had the first degree. Family members with cancer, but she had no first degree family members with cancer. She was married, she came with her family. She never used drugs, but she was a very heavy smoker. She had fifty pack years of smoking in a sixty five year old woman. So she was smoking fifty years a pack a day, which, as you can imagine, most likely led to this, and
she still was smoking while she had cancer. I saw her, the left eyelid was drooped, her lungs were clear. She was found to have this cancer. She came here and she chose to be treated with radio surgery only nearly ten years ago, and she had declined any surgery, she declined any chemotherapy. And she's done great, and the cancer that we've treated in the chest has never returned there and she's functional in carrying on all our normal activities.
And while we're talking about her today, well, she had a scare. She had some new symptoms and she wanted to know if it was cancer or not, and we checked her out. We got a pet scan, we've got a brain scan, and there was a suspicious lesion in the hip, and in fact we did an MRI and the MRI showed no cancer. So nearly ten years later, the cancer treated along with radiosurgery radiation only is in remission.
There's been no evidence of recurrence. She's living her life, doing great, having a great life nearly ten years after a very advanced cancer that was growing into the media steinum, growing into the order and growing into.
The carodit artery.
This is the work we do every day at thirty four Broadway for patients who come from around the world like this to get care, which she believes and I would agree, was led to excellent results for her. I want to take just a minute to introduce myself. I like to do that because so many people give advice. She was out at other hospitals, seeing other doctors and she just was not satisfied. It took a long time to diagnose her. So I just wanted to tell you who I am and who's on the other side of
this radio or telephone or computer however you're listening. My name is doctor Gil Liederman. I was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa. Went to public school University MD at twenty five, just like my illustrious brother, doctor Tad Liederman. Here this weekend with me. Ted Liederman's illustrious doctor, my older brother MD at twenty five. I was MD at twenty five, and my son doctor Ario Leaderman, cancer doctor, board certified MD at twenty five. Three Doctor Liederman's all
mds at twenty five. We're here for you. If you're really lucky, you get doctor Ario Leader. He was thoughtful and caring and compulsive, Board certified, trained in some of the biggest hospitals from East Coast to West Coast. Here for you every day, thoughtful, carying fouls up is there for you. Loved by the patients and loved by the families and the staff. I went on after MD twenty
five to Euros of Chicago. Michael Reese, trained for three years in internal medicine, board certified, took care of thousands of patients. I went on to Harvard Medical School in Boston, went to the prestigious Dana Farbara Cancers Too, where I trained, took care of thousands of patients with cancer over three years, and stayed on the staff treating patients there and then after that at Harvard Medical School the illustrious Joint Center
for Radiation Therapy. Trained in radiation and colleges, took care of thousands of patients and board certified and now here for you. The only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation and collegist here in New York, one of the few in the world. At thirteen tenty four, Broadway Radio Surgery in New York, the home of radio surgery, the home of body radio surgery in America. The first doctor to performs stereotactic, non invasive pinpoint treatment that allows us to
give high doses precisely to cancers. We have an extensive experience over decades with about forty thousand patients treated with high success. Where we take cancer, whether it's in the brain, the skin, the head of neck, areas, lymph nodes, head and neck cancers like the throat and tongue and tonsils, voice box, and then in the chest and the lungs, the lymph nodes, in the breast, abdomen, liver spleen, pancreas, gastrointestinal,
colorectal cancers, also bladder cancers. So many people come here because they do not want to lose their bladder from bladder cancer. So many men nine thousand men have come here for prostate cancer treatment because they want a more successful treatment, more successful proven better in our data and avoiding radical surgery, avoiding hormonal therapy for most men. This is the work that we do every day, and it's
why so many patients with so many cancers. And you get the list if you want, there's one hundred and twenty cancers we treat. Come for innovative treatment options, to learn about options and learn about things. I would tell you that ninety percent of the people that I see learn things about their own body they were never told or never understood previously. So there's lots of reasons to
come here Radioso to New York crtay for Broadway. Whether you want to get a check up, and you're welcome to do that, whether you're recently diagnosed with cancer and you want to know about all the options first, like that woman who did not want to lose her breast or part of her breast, and number three category, you have a cancer and you're getting treatment elsewhere, and treatment's not going your way. You're not getting better, your cancer
is not going away, it's not tolerated. Lots of reasons to see Doctor Liederman, thirty eighty four Broadway, Broadway, thirty eighth treat in the heart of New York City. War except most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid 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 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 Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices to consider his prostate cancer treatment for you most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted thirteen eighty four broad Way 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 Leaderman.
Did you know that you've got choices?
That there can.
Be a bad way?
Did you know that you've got choices?
Conductor THEA do to me.
Today, you want your choices is a much bad way too want two choices? Conductor Leader mean today, did you know that you've got choices?
That there can.
Be a bad way?
Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor thea doer mean today? To want your choices is a much bad way to two joy says conducted Leader.
Man's day. Doctor Liederman, Cancer Treatment thirteen eighty four Broadway.
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the WR Studios in the hearts of New York City. Were just a few steps from the Radio Surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer non and 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 gentleman sixty years old. He was born in Dominican republics. Marrity has two children, and he went to the doctor's PSA was five point four. PSA is prostatic specific antigen should be four. You can have prostate cancer with a PSA of one, one or two or three. I've seen that the guidelines in America are generally four. He went to the doctor's PSA was five point four. He was repeated was three point six two, But he had a biopsy anyway.
His doctor did a biopsy and he found a glease in seven cancer. He had two cores positive. He had no difficulty urinating. He had no waking up at night. He had blood after the biopsy, but none otherwise. His weight was one ninety five two years ago it was two o five with the height of five foot six. He's being treated for high blood pressure and diabetes. He's taking medications for that. He never smoked. He has no car restorms for breath. His father had pancreas cancer but
no prostate cancer, and he had shoulder surgery. He worked in the food industry. He came to me. I examined him. His prostate was enlarged, so he came to me with a prostate. There was large on repeat, his PSA was five. Gleas in seven cancer Gleason is a more aggressive cancer. Gleason. In the old days, people said, oh, I have prostate cancer, but the didn't know how aggressive it would be. So some people had very aggressive cancer, some had very slowly
aggressive cancer. Gleased understood. You can make a scale by looking at the cancer under the microscope, and he made a scale from two to ten. Two was the best, ten is the worst, right in the middle is six or everything more than six is a more aggressive cancer. So his PSA was out of range. Unrepeat, his Gleason score was seven, and we talked about all the options and he understood. And of thousands of men, many of Gleason seven cancer. Our results are ninety percent successful, which
is quite high. With the best surgery, the success is about sixty percent. Usual radiation is about fifty five sixty percent. So there's lots of reasons to come here for evaluation. Most men come with prostate cancer or wishing to learn about prostate cancer because they don't want to have surgery that they know that with surgery for prostate cancer, most men end up leaking urine. Most men lose their erections. Most men have a shortening of the penis. It's all
from the surgery, from radical or robotic surgery. Also, most men want a more effective method of radiation. Not all radiation is the same, and that's really so important. So often I see men and we explain it and actually show them graphs, and I will invite you in if you want to see that. I'll show you graphs about
the different kinds of treatment. And it's sometimes difficult that patients should understand that the results are better depending on the physician and technique and technology, and they can range dramatically. So if you decide to come in here you want to get checked out, I will go over the data for you. If you're having surgery in two days, you have plenty of time where you can even postpone your surgery so it can meet. But most likely we can meet.
We'll most likely we'll range time for you so you don't have to get a suboptimal treatment. And surgery often is suboptimal my view, why, Well, it's invasive, you'll be in the hospital, it's pretty deforming surgery. Most likely the erections will be diminished very commonly. There's other symptoms, including a shortening of the penis leaking the urine and impotence,
lack of erections. So most men would rather have more successful treatment, avoiding radical surgery, avoiding being in the hospital, having outpatient therapy here at thirty four Broadway with the doctor who's performed nine thousand patients, treated on nine thousand patients. Obviously, patient treatments are more. So this is the work that we do every day. So this man, by the way,
I will tell you something else. He was treated here nine years ago for his glease in seven cancer and now his PSA is zero, So his sex life works as urinary life works. His body's not shortened. He's very happy about having treatment here. And by the way, he was referred by a eurologist who hates to do surgery. Some eurologists love to do surgery, and that's obviously what
a surgeon is paid to do. But this surgeon just hates to do surgery, I believe because he knows that most likely will take a man who's impotent, who is sexually active, and turn them into someone who's impotent, someone who has controlled the urine, make them leak urine inshortance of penis. Not every man survived surgery so there's lots of reasons to come here for evaluation. And we obviously know, as we talked about earlier, men to get checked out
for prostate have a markedly less chance of dying. Men who ignore it have a forty greater chance of dying from prostate cancer. So there's lots of reasons get checked out, lots of reasons to call for information, lots of reasons to get our booklet, lots of reasons to get our DVD, lots of reasons to be examined, lots of reasons to get a PSA. And you can start that all by giving us a call at two and two choices. Two and two two four six forty two thirty seven is
the digital phone number. Again, two and two choices is an easy way to think about it. Choices. We believe you do have choices. Everyone has choices, and in digits is two and two two four six forty two thirty seven. So that's what we do. And this is a good news for this man eight years later, cancer free. This is the work we do. We'll talk about a woman who's sixty two years old from Ecuador. She has a she's had a cancer on her nose she had a
basis cell cancer. She's had mot surgery, which is a radical surgery on her face three times, and she's fed up with us. She's fed up with deformity. She had this big cancer on her right side of her nose, on the islah where the air goes into the nose, and she just did not want to have deforming surgery for skin cancer. And we've treated thousands of people with non invasive treatment with high success our success rates ninety
five percent. It's non invasive, nothing touches the body, whether it're on the ie, ear, nose, mouth, arm, leg, trunk, with high success rate in high quality of life. We can send you information just about skin cancer and our special unique treatment here at thirteen eighty four Broadway. Give us a call for any of these issues. Give us a call 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 DVD, just contact doctor Liederman at two one two choices. That's two one two two four six four to two three seven. That's two one two two four six four two three seven.
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 D 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 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 called doctor Liederman two and
two choices. It's easy with doctor Liedderman. Trying to save lives called doctor Liederman two and two choices.
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