The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed for cancer treatment. Most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York, First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liderman hits your
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 for 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. It's doctor Leederman with Carrie Stubbs, who sings and writes about his cancer treatment. Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight. Cataplane hop a train don't has a tap? Call two on two choices for an appointment, Mate, so cancer
can be said straight? My cancer it was twenty two centimeters. Now I am cancer free. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospital stay, no chemo therapy. I'm grateful to Doc taleder Man at New York Radio Surgery. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospitals. Day made me very happy. Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight. If the address my cancer had been set straight, called to on two choices for an Appointment's mate the toleeder Men's
top rights. 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.
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. This is doctor Liederman, and thank you Rob, and thank you No and thank you for tuning in today and every day every day we're on the radio, and every day we learn together. We learn new things. Every day. Every show is different, and the reason we're here is to educate so that you if God forbid you or your loved ones or family or friends, or even that person down the street streak gets sick, I needs care and needs advice, You'll think back, Hey, this show has changed
your life. And I can tell you it's changed so many lives. There's so many people I can think of who were listening to the show. They called me up, whether it was a tumor on their ear, a tumor on their brain, skin cancers. We see so many people with skin cancers who surgeons. Dermatologists are surgeons dorm means in Latin skin and just one who studies the skin, but actually a dermatologist is a surgeon. So many people with skin cancers basal cell and squay miss cells on the face and eyes and
ears and mouth and hands and feet and elsewhere. And I could tell you the three million skin cancers, and that's right, there's three million skin cancers a year. I would say that probably ninety nine percent of them are referred for surgery, usually mo's mohs mo's, which is kind of deforming or excavation of surgery. It removes, They try to remove all the cancer. They say they can get the last cancer sell. But doctors cannot see the last
cancer sell. So when they say that, I don't believe it's true. I don't believe they should be telling that their patients. And I also believe one more thing that I believe that doctors should be telling patients all the options. It's how we're trained, how we're taught, at least how I was taught years ago, is that we're supposed to be educated, and we're supposed to pass on the education to our patients and their loved ones. And that's
what we do here at thirteen eighty four Broadway. Even our package if your call office now or later or never. Even our package will include all the options. We talk about chemo and surgery, different forms of radiation, and no treatment, hospice, and also we talk about various forms of radiation, including what we think is the best for most people, stereotactic radiosurgery. We're
the first in the Western hemisphere with stereotactic body radiosurgery. We know doctors almost always say you go to the doctor with the most experienced and we know who the doctor is with the most experience is the person who started radio surgery decades ago. When all the other places we're doing standard radiation with weeks and weeks of treatment and standard radiation radiating healthy tissues. One doctor stood up and say, hey, there's a better way to hit the cancer, not hit healthy
organs. And because we can hit the cancer, we can give higher doses, and higher doses are more successful. They're biologically different. Standard radiation and radiosurgery are so different. And one of the most common questions I get is, doctor Leaderman, what is radio surgery or radio surgery is not surgery. There's no cutting, there's no bleeding, so it's a misnomer. It's wrongly
named. It's kind of to say the radiation beam acts like a knife to eliminate the cancer, but it's not a knife, and it's really a form of treatment that's precise, non invasive. Nothing touches the patient's body, patient lays in a particular position. We're the only ones, the best of my knowledge, to use the stereotactic frame, a frame to hold the body in position, and we're able to hold the body and hit the cancer non invasively
in minutes. Patients come in, get their treatment, turn around, go home, go to lunch, go across the street to Macy's or Bryant Park or Penn Station or Port Authority wherever. Many people work and walk in the areas. Many people take the train or subway or bus in the area. Many people come from around the world. We have patients right now from all over the world, from Canada and Florida and Europe and Africa, all over
the world here for treatment. I saw even today there's two hundred thousand people a day from Japan who check out our website. Can you imagine that two hundred thousand people a day from Japan, just as an example of one country who check our website and by the way, our website, if you want to check it out, is rs NY DOTRG Robert Samnewyork dot org. Brilliant
stands for Radiosurgerynewyork dot org. So if you wonder why two hundred thousand people from Japan and millions from America check out our website, well you can too. But if you have a cancer question, it's always best to meet in person. So I want to talk about patients. Every day I see patients and every day take notes, and every day we come here and talk about our patients. That's what we're going to do today, of course, like
every day, and you're always welcome. If you have a particular questions, it's always best to meet in person. So there's no zoom, zoom and gloom. With zoom and gloom and telephone calls, she can't examine the patient communications totally different. Had a patient who came to me. One of the biggest performers in the New York Philharmonic. He saw as cardiologists by zoom,
and then he came to me the next day. His cardiologist said he was in perfect health, and I found that he had a major he was in heart failure and of course, the cardiologists on Zoom and Gloom and Doom couldn't examine the patient, and the patient didn't even know it was in heart failure. Telephone calls, the patient can only talk about what he or she has, and so there's no physical examine. Doctors and patients have known for hundreds of years the best way to meet, the most serious way to meet,
is in person, and that's why we do that every day. So I want to talk about a gentleman, and I'm talking about him because well, his sister just came to see me. This is a man, the businessman in one of the five Birls, and he's about fifty years old and he's a hot shot businessman and I think he's doing okay. And he's in the construction industry and he's in the housing industry, and he's successful in his field. And then he started to lose weight and had abdomino pain and he got
a scan into one of the smaller hospitals. He got a biopsy and he was found to have a colangio carcinoma. Calanchio carcinoma is the cancer of the bile ducks. So if you think about it, the liver makes these juices, and these juices go to the gallbladder, and then from the gall bladder they go through ducks through passageways. It's like whatever air conditioner goes through ducks.
Well, the juices in the body have to travel somehow, and they go through ducks into the intestines where they pass through juices onto intestines so you can digest. So it's mandatory to digest, and without those juices, we can't digest and we'd probably starve to death. So this man developed a cancer of the bile ducts, and it's called a coolangiocarcinoma Klannger. Carcinomas are cancers that are difficult sometimes to detect, and so there's nothing you can feel.
Really, it's not like a breast cancer. You can feel a lump or throat cancer where you have a pain in your throat, or skin cancer. We have a mold or a kidney cancer. We might have blood in the urine no so klanda. Carcinomas detected by a scan. Usually sometimes there's blood testers like pancer's. Cancers are often detected by scanning. And sometimes people say, well, doctor leader them, how can have a cancer if I don't have any symptoms. Well, any one of us can have a cancer.
You can have a cancer size of a pee anywhere in your body. How would you know about that? How would you possibly know about that? So many of us, probably some of us listening today, have cancers that are undetected because you just can't detect it unless you come to a doctor. And many people come to us for cancer checkups, cancer screenings, to check the breasts and the lung and the prostate and intestines and the whole body skin and
elsewhere. So this man had abdominal pain and weight loss, and he had a scan, he had a biops he had a collegic carcenoma. And then he thought he was really super smart, and he went to one of the biggest hospitals in New York City and they did a scan and they found he had stage four cancer. So stage four means the cancer has traveled, it's gotten in the bloodstream, and it's traveled. In a hit case, they had traveled to the lung and lymphanodes and other sites. And they started them
on chemo therapy. They told him it's okay, the chemo's going everywhere in the body. Your cancer's going elsewhere in the body, and the chemo's going everywhere in your body. And I'm sure you've all heard about that. You probably all had friends or loved ones or there's Oh, don't worry, the chemo's going over the body. Well, the problem with that is, it's true, the chemo's going most everywhere in the body. But they don't tell
you what chemo. Doctors don't tell you. I have a chemo. I spent years at Harvard studying, and years at Harvard treating patients, and years at Harvard and the staff. What they don't tell you is that the chemo doesn't work very well. So sure it's going over the body. They put it in the veins and it goes over the body. But the problem is doesn't have the power, of capacity or ability to cure the cancer, so
it's going all over the body. And his patient thought he was very smart because he went to this fancy hospital with oodles of dollars and oodles of bills, and chemo is usually about twenty ten to twenty thousand dollars a month, so you can see how bills had up to one hundred two hundred thousand dollars a year at these super duper places, and they're not shy about sending bills and other things. But what they can't do is to give a treatment that
is durable. And he heard this radio show, and he came and he had one mass that was huge. One mass was almost the size of a melon, big melon, in his abdomen, in his liver actually, And I saw him and I explained to him and his loved ones that the chemo just does not have the strength or the power or the capacity to be successful. And I mean successful. I don't mean for a day or a week or a month. I mean to cure the cancer, to make the treated
cancer go away. Now chemo is going throughout his body and the lung and the lymphodes and the liver. It was going everywhere, Yeah it was. But the problem is that chemo does not have the capacity for this kind of cancer, and in fact, for most cancers, to cure the patient. So the doctor never really tells the patient, in my view, the truth. You can say, hey, I'll give you the treatment, and it might slow down the cancer for a week or a month, but then the
cancer will grow right back. He doesn't, she doesn't say that. And if they said that to the patient, probably the whole chemo industry would collapse. It it's a multi billion dollar industry. If you read the newspaper, you'll see about company number X buying company number Z for I don't know what, twenty trillion dollars because they expect to be reimbursed so much. And sometimes I have patients who come to me their pills are thirty or forty thousand dollars
a month, and they say, oh, don't have insurance. But that's not exactly the case. So often there's a co pay, and then all of us pay when the insurance rates go up. All of us pay. You and I and your neighbor and the person down the street. We all pay for treatment that really doesn't buy very much for the patient. It's not like when you have gonorrhea and you get penicillin and the gonerhea usually goes away
or most commonly goes away. That's a successful treatment. And a lot of people are expecting well that the chemotherapy will work like for penicillin and gonerehea. It's not the same. And sad to say that patients are really not informed.
They're not really being told the limitations of the treatment. So for this man, this fifty year old businessman with a big massive kolandri carcinoma, had a super duper famous hospital getting chemo and he comes here and I explained to him, while that chemo is just not going to give him what he wants, which is a durable response to treatment. And he said, well, what would you recommend? I said, well, if you want, if you want to have a proof, we can treat the worst tumor in your
body. We can treat that big tumor, the twelve centimeter mass in your liver, and then you'll see which treatment works better, our treatment or your million dollar treatment at super duper General. And he agreed, and he started a treatment and he had our treatment to the biggest mass. And this was about eight months ago, and well, his doctor getting him the chemo was so angry at doctor Liederman, so angry that we would say that his chemo
wasn't as good as he was led to believe. And so the patient wanted to believe somebody. He had to believe somebody, had to believe a fairy tale, or he had to believe a doctor who was telling him the straight dope. And I believe the straight dope, because I like to be able to sit there five years and ten years and whatever later and say, yeah, whatever I told you, or your loved one, whatever I told you,
that's the way it was. And I can tell you every day I have patients who come and say, doctor Liederman, of all the doctors I saw, you're the one who told me the straight story. So now the patient comes back and he had my treatment about eight months ago, and he had the chemo, the twenty thousand dollars a month chemo, and what's happened. Well, the cancer that we treated, the biggest mass, the most difficult mass, is dead in the water. He had a pet scan shows
it's dead in the water. It doesn't even pick up any pet scan activity. Petscan is a radioactive sugar. It goes throughout the body and usually cancer likes to eat, to eat a steak or a potato or sugar, but sugar's easy to put a radiation label on it and measure the activity of the cancer. And so he had a pet scan and the pet scan showed the tumor. The cancer we treated, the clanchy carcinoma twelve centimeters successfully treated,
and he's had no more treatment to that. In eight months he had the treatment. He came in, We made a stereotactic frame, We computerized the body. We said it had visible beams attacked the cancer. He had about about seven eight treatments. Treatments sake about twenty minutes. He gets up and goes home or goes to work, He does his business, takes care of his loved ones. Well with us, that was it. That was it.
Months and months ago. With chemo, he got chemo and chemo, and chemo and chemo, and now what's the verdict months later, eight months later, Well, I saw the pet scan, and the pet scan showed the cancer we treated is dead in the water. Just like your communicator, doctor Liederman, communicated to this patient and all the other cancers pretty much all
of them have all grown taken off. The chemo number one and chemo number two and chemo number three have been useless, useless, And now the family screaming, oh, doctor Liederman, please tell super duper General your secrets on how you treated the patient so they can do what you do. It doesn't work that way. Look, I've been treating patients with radio surgery since nineteen eighty six years and years and decades, I've treated about forty thousand patients,
and every patient really is different. There's no one formula fits everybody. And this is the work we do. And this is kind of proof to you, and proof to the family, and proof to this man, and proof to our staff that the treatment that we perform most commonly works, most commonly kills the cancer where we aim the beam. And it's also likely to talk about most every day that the chemotherapy, sad to say, just does not live up to its hype, does not live up to its price, does
not live up to its toxicity. Lots of people who get chemotherapy because remember the chemotherapy is like a poison going through the body, so it damages the bone marrow. Many people lose their hair, many people who have damage to the nerves. Many people know what's called neuropathy in the hands and feet,
where their hands and feet are numb and painful. But one patient recently had so much chemo, had so much neuropathy they couldn't walk because the chemotherapy had damaged the nerves, had harmed them so much they could not any longer walk. So this man who had a race between doctor Liederman's radiosurgery to the biggest, most difficult mass. Well, that cancer is dead in the water. All the other cancer got chemotherapy ten twenty thousand dollars a month, useless progressive
cancer didn't work, and now they're begging for doctor Liederman's secret formula. Well, it's always best to return here for evaluation and treatment and consideration. If you're getting chemo and it's just not working, or you have toxicity and you don't like that toxicity, or it's not working or not tolerated, or you want to learn about other options that are probably being hidden from you, it's probably time to give doctor lead him in a call at two choices. You
can check our website, which is r SNY dot org. RSNY dot org. Our phone number is two one two choices. Two and two means New York City and choices. Just like this man had choices, and he chose our achievement for the biggest cancer mass, which was successful still to this day. And that's the reason so many people come to us from around the world. That's the reason why two hundred thousand people in Japan check out our website
every day, and millions here in America mind. Doctor Liederman will be right back. Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when surgery didn't help and toxic chemo stopped working. Many come in pain. Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when their caregiver has no more care to offer. Doctor Liederman bringing innovative cancer care for decades. When the next cancer drug is not as promised, when surgery was to fail to pass, we may be able to
offer you new cancer treatment options. We treat new and recurrent cancers, small or large, 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 tres choices two on two choices. Radical surgeries deform beautiful bodies. Doctor Liederman treats cancer noninvasively. Woman afraid to cancel mystectomy, afraid to offend doctors more than deforming her own body. Woman lust her face, vision, hearing and smell by doctor. She felt walked on water. Water is gone, cancer is back. Woman lost her
entire arm cancer relapsed with vengeance. Here for second chance after not wanting to wait minutes to see doctor Liederman, a visit that might have saved her arm and life. Prostate cancer surgery elsewhere deforms, leaks, impairs, shortens. Right. Moment to meet doctor Liederman for cancer treatment is now. Doctor Leiderman might save your life. Doctor Leederman, most experienced body radio surgery, accepts
most insurances Medicare, Medicaid. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth First in America. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices. Call doctor Leederman two and two choices. 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 for 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 Liederman, we're back. We are back, and that we
have some secret things to tell you in just a few minutes. I want to talk about a man who came to me fifty sixty six years old, born in Jamaica, and I would tell you in the Caribbean there's lots of cancer. This man came as a sixty six year old, as a black man. And we know blacks in America one in six black men will get prostate cancer. One in twenty three will die of cancer the prostate And why
do we talk about it? What educated? Of course, we take care of men and women and children of every race and religion and creed and color. But were raising a flyg Hey, you may want to come in and get a check up with the possibility of cancer, or if you have cancer, you might want to learn about treatment options that most likely will give you a better chance to be successfully treated. This man came to me sixty six years old, born in Jamaica. He has four children. He worked in
the hospital and they had an elevated PSA. He had a biopsy showed a Gleason nine cancer. So Gleason understood that there were different kinds of cancer. And every man that comes here with prostate cancer, we talk about it and show him and his loved ones the difference, and he knows that most likely with surgery, the cancer would come back, and with surgery most likely would damage the nerves, and damaging the nerves most likely would make him impotent.
Men who have surgery in the prostate ninety eight percent have damage to the nerves, damaged their erections. Eighty percent have trouble holding the urine and leak urine. So this man had a Gleason nine cancer, a risky cancer. He's born in Jamaica, risky group, and he had scans of his body and there was no evidence of spread. So he had a biopsy elsewhere. The doctor told him, well, you better have surgery. Well, he heard about surgery, was smart and he decided to come here for a second opinion.
And this is the work that we do every day. He's one hundred and sixty pounds, he's five foot eight. He has had no radiation exposure. He has no family history. He was born in Jamaica. He works one of the big hospitals, and yet he came here for treatment, not the big hospital where he works. And I examined him. He had a te C gleason nine, prostate cancer PSA eight, and he came years ago,
years ago, and we offered him treatment. We talked about all the options, and he chose our treatment because he liked the idea of no hospitals and no radical surgery and data. He learned about all the options here which no other doctor showed him. The options. We talked about proton beam and surgery and robotic surgery and open surgery and radiation in various forms of radiation.
And he chose our treatment with his high risk cancer gleason nine, five years ago and now his PSA is zero and he is very happy to be in remission, no evidence of cancer, doing great with a good quality of life. And this is the work that we do every day. At thirteen eighty four Broadway. We'll talk about a woman who comes fifty one years old, born in New York City. She's perimenopazo, single, without children. She went to the doctor for a viral syndrome. She had a chest X ray.
She just found up a nodule. She had a cat scan, a pet scan, shod a biops used, told she had cancer. She was sent to a surgeon. Sergeant said they have to cut out part of her lung. She went to one of the biggest hospitals in New York and the doctor did not tell her about all the options. The doctor told her, oh, you have to have your lung cut out. She quit smoking two days before she saw me and the doctor. The surgeons, other doctors did
not tell her any options, and she didn't like that. She didn't like that the doctors were not being honest with her about options. Her sister died of cancer and I examined her. This is a woman. If you saw her, doctor saw, you would not know she had cancer. Lungs were clear, limpnals were clear, normal heart sounds. After was solved, she had a nodule in the lung. Biopsy proven and she chose our treatment. And she chose it because she felt that it was the best for her.
She felt there was excellent results which we reviewed. She did not like the idea of going into the hospital having part of her lung removed, her lung deflated, being the ICU, having a chest tube, having pain and then hoping not to get an infection or their complication in the hospital with us totally opposite, no cutting, no bleeding, We make a stereotytic frame of the body, we computerize the body, and then we send in beams in just
a few treatments, and our success rate is very high. And that's what she chose five years ago. So five years ago we treated her for lung cancer, no cutting, no bleeding, no hospitals, stay, no anesthesia, and today she is cancer free, doing great. She comes and sees me about twice a year with cancer tests, physical exam scans. 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. Now we're talking about a
woman who is sixty years old. She's a Hispanic woman born in the Dominican Republic, and she came to with a big lump inter armpit. It was biopsied elsewhere. She went to three of the biggest, most famous hospitals in New York City for her lymphoma stage one lymphoma, and some of the doctors told her to get chemo. Some told her not to get chemo, and well, she didn'ts liked it. No doctor told her all the options. Again, the same story. She had a cancer shad a lymphoma in the
armpit, stage one. No one talked to her about the options. No one told her about all the options. Why is that? Why were they only talking about their treatment? And why is it so often the case doctors only talk about their own treatment. Here, you'll come in, you'll see signs and artwork about all the options. We'll give you a package. You will even send you a package. You can call us even now at two and two choices, two and two choices and you'll get a package. Now
about all the options. Well, this woman did not want to have chemo. She didn't want to have no therapy. She don't want to have no treatment either. She wanted the best chance to be cancer free, and no one talked to her about that until she came here met doctor Liederman. And this is the work we do every day. We stayed dure up, we got scans or the pathology, We examined the patient, got blood tests, found she had a stage one lymphoma, and we talked about an option that
most likely she'd be successfully treated with, and that's what she chose. And she chose that ten years ago. Ten years ago, she was treated for this lymphoma. I saw her recently. She's doing great. There's no other so cancer. She never had any other treatment, no surgery, no chemo, NONO therapy, no cutting, no bleeding, no hospitals. Only a few treatments here with doctor Liederman, treatments at no other doctor. The three biggest hospitals in New York City did not offer her. Why did they hide
that from her? Why? Why? Why do you think that is? Well? I want to tell you secret, and that is, if you have an answer, you can call me right now where our lines are open. It's a live program. You can call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. One eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. You'll call up the radio station right now. Wor Noah will pick up the call one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten and put your call
through. So we're live from now till four o'clock. And another secret, you can if you don't want to call now, you can listen to our show from five to six later today and then tonight overnight we'll be on again from midnight to about five am on WR and tomorrow during daytime we'll be back from eleven to twelve, noon, from one to two and three to four.
So there's lots of times to listen to Doctor Liederman. If you want to call us again, call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten, one hundred three two one zero seven ten and one more thing. I want to introduce myself because so many people are on the radio, and so many people aren't really doctors, or so many people don't tell you who they really are. So here I am in a nutshell, Doctor Liederman.
I was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa. Went to public school, university, medical school, Real doctor MD MD at twenty five, real medical doctor like my brother Ted, doctor Ted Liederman MD at twenty five two, Doctor Liderman's MD at twenty five and then the latest doctor Ario Leederman, excellent doctor MD at twenty five trained. I went to medical schools the most
prestigious places. Here is a board certified radiation on collegist here working at thirteen eighty four Broadway beloved by his patients, doctors, families, others, giving warm, compassionate, smart care to his patients. So there's three Doctor Liederman's here for you. Doctor excuse me, Doctor Ariel Liederman. Just give us a call. Board certified at thirteen eighty four Broadway, and I'll tell you
a little bit more about myself. After being MD at twenty five, went to University of Chicago Michael Reese in Chicago, trained in internal medicine, medical medicine. Field treated thousands of patients Board certified internal medicine in Chicago, then went to Boston and Harvard Medical School at the prestigious Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
Trained in medical and college, he treated thousands of patients on the staff at Harvard Medical School and then onward to the Joint Center for Ancient Therapy at Harvard Medical School three more years. Board certified, the only Harvard trained triple Board certified radiation doctor in New York. Here for you. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We're super conveniently located at thirteen to eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City, easy to
get to, most saboys trains. Buses come within steps to our office, the one, two, three, four, five, six, ACE and QRBDFM, seven, S and Q. We're close to Penn Station where we get Amtrak New Jersey Transit Path trains. We're close to Port Authority where all the buses, thousands of buses come every day. And of course Grand Central just steps away from our office. So we made our office in the heart of New York City for your convenience. My name is doctor Liederman. We're
right back. When doctor Leederman came to New York from Harvard, ninety seven percent of women in New York were losing their breasts as breast cancer treatment. But ninety percent of doctor Liederman's patients with breast cancer we're keeping their breasts. Doctor Liederman, and outspoken at of breast saving therapy, educated women about choices, to arm every woman about breast cancer choices, breast saving whenever possible and
desired. When every hospital thought standard radiation was okay, doctor Leederman had a better idea. Innovative Doctor Leederman first brought brain radio surgery to New York and body radio surgery to America. Meet doctor Leederman. Breast conserving therapy over decades. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Call two on two choices, two and two choices about breast cancer treatment. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted.
For a fresh second opinion, called doctor Leederman. Breast cancer treatment called two and two choices, two and two choices. Call doctor Leederman today, two and two choices. It's doctor Liederman with Calvin West singing and writing about his cancer treatment. I had cancer and my hooda at the Radio Surgery Choices. I'm so glad. You wanna thank dot venom phone and you eliot to Katzer. It's not counting. Oh two three, Well up, No pame
is read 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 Liederman at the w o R Studios in the hearts of New York City. For just a few steps from the Radio Surgery New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert,
treats prostate cancer not inviasibly. 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, Thank you so much. That was Calvin singing about his prostate cancer. And he's incredible artist. He performs in Europe and Asia, performs over
New York City. If you want to see him and listen to him recording, you can well listen on our DVD or Prostate DVD features him and he tells his whole case about having prostate cancer and now in remission. He talks about that and you can watch it. Just ask for our prostate DVD. We'll send it to you a no charge. Or you can come in, or you can check him out in Manhattan. He performs at various places. Then he's fantastic. He wrote that song, he performed the song, and
he played guitar for that song. So he is fantastic doing well years later after treatment here at thirteen eighty four Broadway, and so happy that he sings about it. He's so happy. I'm so happy. We're also happy to listen to him. And now we have Howard on the phone. How are you, Howard? I'm doing fair. I had prostate surgery and radiation, okay, and my pay kept on rising, and I called your office to make it. Excuse me before you talking about call my office. How many
years ago were you diagnosed with prostate cancer? Twenty eight years ago? Twenty eight years ago. What was your PSA and Gleason score twenty eight years ago? I don't know the Gleason at that time, it was around four. And after the surgery, did you lose your erections and control the urine? No? No, you had great erections week. I had weeks. I had weeks because the doctor made me categorize myself one hundred and eighty times. Okay, So you had leak each and the erections are fantastic. No,
not anymore. Okay. So the directions are gone and the urinary control is gone. Is that right? Oh? Control is and yes it's a problem, but it's not gone completely. Nothing. Well, but it's as good as it was before before before your surgery. No, okay, so it's a problem. You can say that because when men don't tell the actual facts, it leads other men to get surgery. Then other men end up impotent, and other men end up leaking. So you had the surgery and then
your PSA started rising? Is that what happened after the surgery and the radiation? Well, excuse me, excuse me, excuse me. The point of surgery is to cure you. So why did you get radiation after the surgery? An oncologist suggested it. Why. I don't know why. He just know why. Most likely it was because your PSA wasn't zero after surgery. Your PSA should be zero. Okay, Oh it wasn't zero, so it wasn't radiation. And now why are you calling today? My psa since the
radiation has gone from zero one to four point nine? So the cancer's back, So what's your question now? And doubled it doubled in the last three months. I understand that the cancer's back. So what's your question now? I was, I went to the doctor and he wants me to have a PET scan and a MRI and eventually he wants me to go on hormone surgery. Hormones this is the treatment. Then I then I asked him about if I can get radio your radio. Excuse me? One minute, just one
minute. So you got you had the surgery, it failed, You had the standard radiation, it failed. Now the cancer's back and he wants to do these tests. Have you done those tests yet? Now I'm doing them on the fifteenth of the month. Okay, So if you want to come and see us, and you're just come in with those tests, that's all that happens. Bringing one question. I have one question to ask you. Okay. He told me that I can't have radiation, your radiation. Excuse
me, excuse me. He doesn't even know where the cancer is. It could be it could be in the bones, it could be in the lymph nodes, it could be anywhere in your body. He doesn't know that, so he's giving you an advice based on nothing. Right, Well, his advice to me was excuse me, excoose me. He's telling you you can't have doctor Liederman's treatment, but he doesn't even know where the cancer is. Correct, No one does. I excuse me. You're making a exsumption,
and you're making a false exsumption. You think that there's only one place that the cancer could be in your body, and that's the area where the prostate was, and you have your whole body. Prostate cancer loves to go to the bones and the lymph nodes. You need to get those tests and bring the tests in and we'll talk about it. Okay, if I bring them in, can I if it's in the prostate area, can I have your service? Where it depends where the prostate area is. There's lots of area
there. There's a prostated south area, there's lymphodes next to it area. There's the rest of your body area. So you need to come in in the prostate area. I just told you. There's lots of different areas in the prostate area. There's the immediate area, there's a bladder, neck, there's lymph nodes. There's different areas. And your doctor's telling you the answer without even knowing the answer, which is wrong. In medicine, you have
to have you have to have facts right. We're scientists and we should be advising the patient correctly. So I agree, you should get the PET scan and the MRI. You should get that and then we'll sit and talk about it. That's all I know. I don't know any more else about you. You want to come in You're welcome to come in, but I don't do advice based on presumptions on the phone. This is bad, bad medicine. We take your life seriously us. I've told many people about you.
Well, don't tell anyone about me. Worry about yourself. If you wish, come in with the scans and we'll talk about it. And then there's other scans that could be done as well, before the pet scan. PET scans are very expensive test and lots of radiation exposure to you. There's other tests that are less expensive and probably equally good. So there's other things that could be done besides those particular tests. So again, if you want to come in, please do so, and we'd be honored to see you.
Thank you, God bless you. I'm sorry to all the complications. I'm sorry I had the surgery which didn't work and damaged your quality of life. So God bless you and we'll see you soon. Okay, thank you, God bless you. My name is doctor Liederman. We'll 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 Doctorlederman two and two choices, two and two choices to consider his prostate cancer treatment for you. Most insurances Medicare and 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. It's
doctor Liederman speaking with Laura about lung cancer. You were seen by a pulmonary doctor who was insistent that they open up your chest. Yes, absolutely, and they sent you to the lung surgeon and they were insistent on cutting on you right absolutely, and would not accept me as a patient if I didn't do that. You're a nurse, you worked at some of the biggest hospitals, and you just didn't want your lung on chest opened up and your lung
thrown into the garbage can right the bucket. Why because at the super duper prooper I saw what happened, And what did you see with doctor Liederman, the team and the treatment. It's perfect. You have the treatment and that cancer's gone away, right, it has. What would you tell someone who's got cancer naked? First up doctor Liederman for more information called doctor Liederman two and two choices thirteen eighty four broad We had thirty eighth We accept most insurances,
Medicare, Medicaid, called two and two choices for more information. Thousands treated over decades. Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the WR studios in the hearts of New York City, were just a few steps from the Radio Surgery New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer
expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liderman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Leiderman, we're back. We are back. I want to talk about a sixty seven year old woman. She was born in New York State, and she's
married, and well, she came here. She came there with her wife, so it's a modern era. She had a history of breast cancer. Sad to say, she had bilateral mestectomies elsewhere, and we know at some of the biggest hospitals, ninety seven percent of the women were getting mestectomies for breast cancer. Were here, doctor Liederman, ninety percent of the women were keeping their breast And that, sadness say, was years ago. I wish that we had a chance to meet years ago when she had the breast cancer.
And now she's coming kind of fed up with surgery, fed up with mystectomies, with a squamish carcinoma on her right cheek, and now she does not want to have surgery, she does not want to be deformed again. And well, she heard about her work for treatment of skin cancers of squamosel and basis ol and caratoy can Thomas and well, she did not go back
to that place that did BI lot of mystectomies on her. No, she came here and examined her chad about a centimeter mass and irregular red lesion in front of the ear on the right side, and no lymphanodes were involved, and her lungs were clear, and her heart was fine, and the rest of her body was a okay. And she chose our treatment and we treated her non invasively with no cutting and no bleeding for her skin cancer right on her face. She did not want to be deformed again. She had enough
with BI lot of mistectomy. She did not want to be deformed again. We treated her. She's cancer free, she's doing great, she's happy, healthy, And this is the work we do every day. At thirteen eighty four Broadway, I was talking about Manna fifty three years old, born in Saint Vincent's Island in the Caribbean, with a lymphoma. He had a marginal zone lymphoma. He had chemo and emmunotherapy for years and some of the biggest
hospitals in New York City. He was diagnosed in nineteen eighty three and he had years and years of chemotherapy and well it it wasn't working. He came to us with a mass and the chemo wasn't working. He had years and years. Like we talked about earlier, chemo is one hundred two hundred thousand dollars a year, and we all pay for that. The patient pays, his family pays, I pay, you pay. So many people say, oh, I'm not paying, Well, we're all paying. It doesn't come
from nowhere. We're all paying. And it didn't work, and it was toxic, and no one talked to him about all the options. It's like the woman we had a few minutes ago had cancer in the armpit. No one talked to her about all the options. This man went to several of the biggest hospitals in New York. They kept on giving chemo. It was great for them, one hundred one hundred thousand dollars a year. It was great for them, but it was lousy for the patient. The cancer kept
on growing. He had a limp foma the neck and he came to me ten years ago. We treated him ten years ago and he's been cancer free ever since. It had years of chemo elsewhere. It just didn't work, and they kept on giving him more and more chemo, and they planned to give him even more and more chemo until he came here ten years ago. He's been cancer free with no further treatment. And this is the work that we do every day here at thirteen eighty four Broadway, work except most insurances,
Medicare, Medicaid. This man was so happy. His mother last year had breast cancer and his mother did not want to go to the biggest hospitals in New York because she knew what happened to her son. And she came here and she also is cancer free, doing great. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. Another man with a skin cancer. This man's a bookie. He used to run Bookie and Betts for I guess you know who would do that. Well. He's eighty three
years old, he was single. He had high blood pressure. He was diagnosed with a huge, thick cancer on his left forehead. It was thick and deforming and certains wanted to remove his scalp and he came running here and he was treated here a year ago and also is cancer free from his huge thick skin cancer, scramoussel of the scalp. He just did not want deforming surgery, did not want to be the hospital, did not want to have
his scalp removed. He wanted to have our treatment. We treated him and now he is cancer free, doing great, And this is the work that we do every day I'm talking about. It's fifty three years old, born in New York City. He Singo. He has two children. Came out of a family friend. He had colon cancer. He had abdomino pain and bleeding. He was diagnosed, he had surgery and well, the cancer had traveled. He traveled to lymph Notes. He had chemo and chemo and chemo
and it wasn't working. And chemo usually doesn't work for colon cancer very well, and it didn't work for him. And he came to us with cancer that traveled to the lymph notes and elsewhere, and he wanted, no, can you treat me, doctor Liederman, And the answer was yes, And we treated him years ago and he's actually cancer free stage four. So the doctor said, oh, you have stage four cancer. You need chemo for
the rest of your life. That's what he told him, and they started giving it to him and he out of the toxicity and it wasn't working. Then he came to doctor Liederman thirty eighty four Broadway Radio start in New York when he learned about again all the options that were being hidden from him by his chemo and other doctors. We talked about all the options and he decided he wanted to give it a chance, and he gave it a chance years
ago for stage for cancer. And he's still in remission years later. And this is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. About a woman, beautiful woman takes I guess you'd call her high maintenance woman, right breast cancer. She has postman apostles. She separated without children. She always comes with
a different boyfriend. And years ago she had a large mass, in fact multiple masses in her right breast, invasive cancer, stage T three invasive cancer, and her doctors told her she had to have bilateral mestectomies. They're going to remove the sick breast and they're going to remove the other breast. That's all they offered to her. She has a grandmother of breast cancer and she had planned mestectomies and reconstruction. I can tell you that reconstruction doesn't reconstruct the
breast like God gave anybody. It can make a lump or something like that, but it doesn't recreate. Reconstruction makes it sound like you're going to have your breast back. You're not gonna have your breast back. It will feel different, it will look different, and it acts different. It's not the same. And when they remove the nipple, it takes away most of the
sensation. This woman heard about her work years ago and came for primary treatment here with radiosurgery for the breast, and we treated her years ago and she's been cancer free. I see her. I see her regularly. She comes every visit. She has a different boyfriend. It's a very elegant woman. She's working, active, fully, intact, and this is the work we do. We do scans of her, we do physical exams, you do
blood tests. She's been cancer free. In fact, we have a new breast cancer booklet and the breast Cancer DVD and be honored to add it to you if you wish. We have topics brain tumors, body cancers, lung cancers, pancreas, kidney, liver, coal and prostate bladder, primary cancers, metastatic cancers, booklets and DVDs. We'll mail it to you at no charge, or better yet, come into our office and pick up a package for yourself and your loved ones. We're on the radio every day. We
accept most insurances. This is doctor Liederman called two and two choices. That's two and two two four six forty two thirty seven. 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 Liderman at two on two choices. That's two one two two four six four two three seven. That's two one two two four six four two
three seven. For cancer treatment, most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York. First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liderman hits your cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers from head to toe cancer treatment with possibly a second chance for you.
Meet doctor Leiderman 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 super Convenient Broadway in thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liederman to hit your cancer. Call two one two choices, two on two choices. Did you know that you've got choices? That there can be
a bad way? Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor, they don't mean today? To want to choices is a much bad way to want too choices? Conductor thea doer 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 they don't mean today? To want to choic is a much bad way to want two choices? Conductor, leader mean today. The
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