3PM Dr. Lederman discusses various treatments for cancer - podcast episode cover

3PM Dr. Lederman discusses various treatments for cancer

Mar 10, 202457 min
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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 Liederman hits your

cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers from head to toe cancer treatment with possibly a second chance for you even if chemo radiation or surgery didn't work or isn't tolerated. Goals are your best results and quality of life. Meet doctor Liderman to hit the cancer. He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist. Call two one two choices to one, two choices to meet doctor

Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Free DVD two super convenient Broadway in thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liederman to hit your cancer. Call two one two choices two one two choices. It's doctor Leiderman 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 tait? Call too on two choices for an appointment, Mate, So

cancer, Candy said straight my cancer. It was twenty two centimeters. Now I am cancer free. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospital stay, no chemo 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 and two choices for an appointments Mate the toleder

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

choices. Welcome everybody. It's the Radio Surgery Show with Doctor Gil Leiderman, m D, 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 every day, every day one of the radio. My name is doctor Liederman. Why are we here so much? Well, we try to learn together and educate so that if God forbid, you have a cancer or an abnormality or a lump, or your loved one or your neighbor or your friend or the person down the street, you'll remember. Listeners save lives, and often listeners' lives are saved. And we're going to talk

about that. And we talk about a man whose birthday is tomorrow and his anniversary from being treated four years ago with a very very terrible cancer. We'll talk about him too. My name's doctor Liederman. Every day I see patients in my office at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, where we see people who have a suspicion of cancer, or they want to get

checked up. We see people who newly diagnosed cancer, and we see people who have had cancer and the treatments just not going their way, usually someplace house and they're getting treatment. We're going to talk about that in just a few minutes. We all those categories we'll be talking about in just a few minutes. So we're here today and we'll interact with you. I have to

do it. Sit down if he's a paper, if you want, or sit back and listen and learn, and we hope that you learn a lot, and we hope that you learn so much that you wish to tell other people of God forbid, they have a cancer or a lump and they're not getting good service or timely service. They feel like they're lost in space. Well maybe time to call two and two choices and to visit. My name is doctor Liederman, Board certified cancer doctor, and I'll be back to tell

you more about me and the work we do in a minute. But I want to talk right now. But the person I just saw a few minutes ago, this is a man who came in from upstate New York. He used to live in New York. He lived in New York for forty years with his wife, and then he moved to Cooperstown and he has a bed and breakfast there and he listens to this show all the time. He listens for decades. He listened to why he was in New York. He listens

in Coopertown. And obviously you can go online and listen around the world and Timbuk too if you want. So we always said himself, we've God forbid I ever have a cancer? How common see doctor Liederman. So what's his story. Well, he's about sixty eight years old. He's married as a loving wife, and he's a loving husband and they have a bed and breakfast together. And well, as PSA started going up, In fact, he

started going up about four years ago. So back in Cooperstown, his PSA was four, and well, usually when PSA is four, we start suggesting some work up, and sad to say, nothing happened. And then his PSA went to five, and then to six, and then to seven and then seven point eight, and all of a sudden, his ducks says, well, we better get a biopsy here, and they do a biopsy and they find a Gleason seven cancer. So this is all recent his biopsy was

just done a few days ago in Cooperstown. Coopertown is where the Baseball Hall of Fame is, or several universities in that area. And I say that because you have a better and breakfast. So people come and stay with him, who go to the Hall of Fame. People stay with him. They go whose children usually go to the universities, and they come and visit on Parents' Day in other days. So he met with his doctor, and his doctor I'm well, you have a glease in seven cancer and you have to

have surgery. And then the man said, well, I know. Doctor Liederman talks about Gleason seven cancer and how his treatment is better than surgery. And then the urologist tells him, ah for a glease in seven cancer. By the way, Gleason scores how the cancer looks when a biopsy's done. So when a biopsy's done, the tissues looked under the microscope by a pathologist, and there's a number. If it's cancer, there's a number from two

to ten. Two is the best, ten is the worst. The higher the number, the more aggressive is the cancer, and the more likely the cancer can travel, the more likely the cancer can spread. The more likely the cancer can even kill you. So he was really shocked when he asked the doctor, well, what about Gleason seven cancer? Inductor, Oh, you can't have the doctor Liederman's treatment with Gleason seven cancer. You got to have my treatment with surgery, he said to the patient. And the patient

didn't like that. He didn't like that. The surgeon a eurologist. By the way, eurologists, you are ologist. Euro means you're someone of the urinary system in Latin, and ologists means someone who studies. So urologist is someone who studies the urinary system, but it actually is a surgeon. It's

not a study er. It's a surgeon, someone who cuts on the urinary system, whether it's the bladder or the kidney, or the prostate or the urethra, the system that makes you're in a collection and then pushes you an out. So what did the patient do? First thing? As soon as he got out of the eurologist office, he calls up our office and say, can I come and see doctor Liederman immediately? And of course we made

a spot for him immediately, and I saw him and his wife. He was the last patient I saw actually last night, and I went over all his documents. He brought his pathology, he brought his PSAs. His wife had written all the PSAs down, and of course we called all his doctors to get the records. And then we sat down and talked to him and went through his records. And he's got lots of symptoms. He's yearnating twice a night, probably because of his large prostate. He's yearninating more frequently in

the daytime. He has some discomfort. He had no blood except when he had the biopsy. He had a little bit of blood in the urine. And we went over the data and I examined him and I found he had a large prostate. Otherwise, he's in great shape and he works out as a man who goes to the gym and works out most every day. And

his job is also very physical. And then we sat down like I do with every person, and to show the person and his wife, the man and his wife the data, and he saw it with the most famous surgeon in America, the most famous surgeon, the surgeon that writes books about surgery for prostate cancer and also for Gleason seven. I saw, if he goes

to the most famous surgeon in America. For glease In seven cancer, success with surgery by the most famous surgeon, not this doctor in Cooper's town, or the doctor down the street, or the doctor's most convenient is only forty six percent success, which means fifty four percent of the time the cancer comes back. And the surgeon was sitting there telling the patient how fantastic surgery was. And I further showed the patient not only most likely will the cancer come

back with surgery, radical surgery or robotic surgery. Robotic is just a gizmo that helps the surgeon supposedly operate or open surgeries with a knife in their hands. Either way, success rate for Gleason seven cancers forty six percent by the most famous surgeon in America. And we know that with radical surgery, robotic surgery most likely. In the data from Harvard Medical School shows about ninety eight percent of the men have damage to their sex life. And you know what

that means at about eighty percent or leaking urine. And also because when you remove the prostate and the urethral, the urethra is a tube where the urine travels. So when the urine leaves the bladder and goes out, the penis. It bypasses right through the middle of the prostate through the urethra. The

eurethere is the name of the tube. And so when the eurologist cuts out the prostate and the urethra, it's like when a plumber cuts out part of a pipe and he has to bring the ends together to make the pipe work well. Of course, the urethra is shortened when part of it's removed, and what's also removed and shortened, part of the penis is shortened. The

penis is shortened. So he understood that with radical robotic surgery, like as urologist was right commending north of New York, that most likely the cancer would come back. Number one, number two, that'd be highly likely. Most likely that the man would lose his erections, you would not have further erections, and most likely he'd be leaking urine and he'd have shortening of the penis. And then the man can be asking me several times, but is my

urologist right, You can't treat this person? I said, that's exactly wrong. This is the kind of cancer we treat every day. In our success rate is ninety percent. And that's why so many people like to come here, in fact, come here for treatment of their prostate cancer. Because if you tell a man, okay, you can have a ninety percent success rate or success that's half as much elsewhere, where would you go? And if you have a much better chance of keeping your sex life versus ninety eight percent

the sex life is damaged, where would you go? And if most likely you would keep your urinary control versus most likely losing our leaking urine, where would you go? Or if you have surgery to move yourrethrow which shortens the penis or no radical surgery which leaves urethra and prostate intact, where would you

go? And so it was very obvious and evident to the patient that there's such a huge difference, And it was so obvious to the patient that the urologists was telling them stay away from Leaderman, don't go to Liderman, because he was afraid that once the patient learned. And I can tell you the urologists almost almost everyone who operates on the prostate doesn't give patients the facts,

doesn't give a book like we do. We give a book showing the diagram showing the data of various treatments, whether it's radical surgery, or robotic surgery, or proton beam or various forms of radiation. We give information to the patient, we answer the questions, we show the results, and this is the work that we do for decades. I've been treating prostate cancer for decades. We've treated more than six thousand men with prostate cancer, more than post

anyone else. And this is the work that we do every day. So the patient brought his suitcases, he brought his wife, and they came together. And actually his wife has a sister who lives in Queens. That are staying overnight with a sister this weekend and then heading back up to Cooperstown. And of course I ordered tests because he just was biopsied a few days ago. I ordered test just to make sure the cancer hasn't traveled. And we like to do that. We like to get tests, and most patients feel

reassured that we do testing to make sure the cancer hasn't traveled. What we need to know when one has cancer is what is it? What kind of cancer it is? And he had a Gleason seven cancer in multiple areas, multiple areas. As urologists took out six samples and multiple were positive for Gleason seven can, so this is the work we do. And it gave him a video DVD about our work and information about our work, and so he

went home with lots of information and lots of answers. And we also talk to him about how he can stay in town if he doesn't want to stay with his sister in law. There's places like Hope Lodge which try to accommodate patients from around the world, and other facilities as well. So we do everything we can to make it important and educational and monumental when a person comes

here for evaluation. And of course we accept most insurances Medicare, Medicaid and many people worry about that, and of course we get approval, so we'll call it the insurance and make sure it's all approved. To make sure that you have one less worry about gimmicks and money and other things when people come here, and one more thing. You can obviously contact me, and you

can contact me either by email. My email is gilgil at r s n Y dot org, gilgi l at r s n Y dot org or call us at two one two choices our phone numbers two one two, two four six forty two thirty seven. You can also go online and see much of our prosted information online is r s n Y dot org org. Our website is r s n Y like Radiosurgerynewyork dot rg. So there's lots of ways to communicate with us also over here on the radio or on the radio every

day to educate and inform. And we hope that whatever you learn you pass on because we know that listeners save lives. Listeners save lives by passing on this information, and also listeners lives are saved by learning and getting better treatment. Like this man who's been listening for twenty years about prostate cancer from Cooperstown, New York, and people listen from around the world and come here from around the world to get better treatment. And sad to say, the information

that this man's doctor gave him was not correct. It seems like it was trying to serve the doctor and not the patient, which is really sad. We talk about all the options. When you come to Radio Servier, New York, you'll see the art of radio surgery. You see all the options. We talk about local therapy, regional therapy, systemic therapy, combination therapy,

even no therapy. We talk about surgery and chemo and immunotherapy in various forms of radiation radiosurgery, which is a more precise form of treatment, first pioneered in the Western Hemisphere by guess who, Doctor Liederman. I'll be right back. Many people with cancer come to doctor Leederman when surgery didn't help and toxic chemo stopped working. Many come in pain. Many people with cancer come to doctor when their caregiver has no more care to offer. Doctor Liederman bringing

innovative cancer care for decades. When the next cancer drug is not as promised, when surgery was to fail to pass, we may be able to offer you new cancer treatment options. We treat new and recurrent cancers small or large, most anywhere in the body, even if prior chemo, radiation or surgery didn't work. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices for

a free booklet DVD thirty eighth and Broadway. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted, Harvard trained, Triple Board certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices for innovative cancer treatment. Best is to meet doctor Liederman in person. Call two and two choices two on two choices Radical surgeries deform beautiful bodies. Doctor Liederman treats cancer non invasively. Woman afraid to cancel mystectomy.

Afraid to offend doctors more than in deforming her own body. Woman lost 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 Liederman might save your life. Doctor Liederman most experienced body Radiosurgery 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 Liederman two and two

choices. 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. For just a few steps from the Radiosurgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere

with body radiosurgery. You can also call doctor Liederman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back, We are back. I want to talk about a woman who's seventy three years old. She was born in Trinidad. She came to me years ago. She's widowed, she has no children. She has a sister who has myeloma. And this woman, my patient, was seen by her doctor for

anemias. You sent to a hematologist. You found to have a hemoglobin, which is how many red blood cells eight point six normals about double that. Hermatacre was forty five normals about double that, with a white blood count also low at three point six and a play the count of one hundred and seventy four thousand. She had a pet scan and showed disease in the bone marrow. She had a fracture of her sternum. I examined her and I found a and the eye. She had a mass actually in the orbit just above

the eye on the right eye. It was a fleshy mass. It was growing, growing, growing, pushing her eye down. We examined her, We buy upsied her. She had a myeloma. She had a rare blood condition of blood cancer, just like her sister sister in myeloma. She had myeloma and she had a mass pressing down on her eye, and we offered treatment. We put together a program for her, and years ago we treated that mass in the eye, We treated her bone marrow. And now she

came in this week cancer free. She's had no further treatment for myeloma. She's in remission. She came with a new testing. That mass in the eye is gone, that pressure on the eye is gone, the mass is gone. After our pinpoint treatment to just hit that mass of the above the right eye. And this is the work we do. And of course we're the first with focused beam radiation to the brain area like in her the eyes part of the brain. Really it's connected to the brain, and we were

to use her decades of expertise. We were the first in new York when all the other places, facilities, hospitals, doctors were using standard treatment. One doctor understood that it's better to focus and hit the cancer and not the healthy tissue. And for years people, doctors and hospitals denounced that they didn't understand why it's better to treat the cancer and not the healthy tissue. And

this is the work we do every day. And while everyone else was denouncing doctor Liederman for his precision innovative technology, we were gaining and still have the most experience and that's why people come to us from around the world. She was born in Trinidad, and she's so happy she came here. She's in remission. Her vision is good. There's vision is actually perfect in the right eye, which is incredible. This is the work we do years later and

now cancer free from her myeloma. I want about a man who comes from New Jersey. He is seventy two years old. He came with the history of skin cancers on his arm. He had skin cancers on his left arm, his upper arm, his lower arm. He had a high PSA. He was taking concoctions and well before he had surgery on his arm. He's left with big scars which he did not like for his squamous cancer and now he has a mass on his right cheek and he just does not want surgery

again for his squamous carcinoma, skin cancer on the face. And so many people come to us with skin cancers around the eye, the nose, the mouth, the ears, forehead, scalp, even the arms and legs, hands and feet and trunk. We have a huge experience I assume better and longer than anyone else. Are unique doses and a team that works together to treat skin cancers. We have a book that to send you if you think

you have a skin cancer. Who's aid most risk for skin cancer? Well, people with fair complexion, blonde hair, blue eyed, or the biggest risk. If you have a sore or a mass or a lump on your skin, it'd be great to have a biopsy to come in here. You don't have to be blonde. Remember Bob Marley. Bob Marley, the famous Jamaican singer, died of skin cancer. He had a melanoma on his toe and traveled to his brain and he died in London. And we treat melanoma

skin, We treat melanoma on travels. We have a huge experience treating melanoma as well, so we have a huge experience. Treating skin cancer is the most common or square miss cell and basal cell. There's about three million skin cancers a year. And sad to say, dermatologist when we talked about eurologists dermatologists Latin word for skin dermatologists are surgeons, and sad to say, most patients are referred for surgery like this man. And he just did not want

to have radical or deforming surgery on his face. He didn't want to scar on his face. He didn't want part of his face gone. With surgery that tissues are gone. Whereas with radio surgery, we send invisible beams to hit the cancer. There's no cutting, there's no bleeding. Actually nothing even touches the patient except for an invisible beam. And our success rate is ninety five percent. So it's highly successful with no cutting and no bleeding. Outpatient

therapy in minutes. And this is the work we do. And he came pell Meo when he had a squamous carcnom on his face and he's doing great on treatment. He's being treated right now. I see him, We get him set up, he has his treatment a few minutes and then he gets out, goes home or lunch, or goes across the street to Macy's. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway, Broadway and thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. And earlier

I said i'd introduced myself. I want to do that. My name is doctor Gil Liederman. I was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa. And I said that because so many people are on the radio and so many people will never tell you, you know, or even person who they are, what they are. Have so many people who see healthcare professionals, they assume they're a doctor. But then I go through the records, I see that

they're not a doctor. So I want to explain at least who I am and who's talking here, and whether you can trust her or not, that's up to you. My name is doctor Gil Liederman. I was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa. Went to public school, University Medical School, Real MD, real medical doctor at age twenty five, just like my brother Ted Liederman doctor Ted Liederman, Real MD at twenty five and doctor Ariel Aaril Leaderman MD at twenty five. My son who was board certified cancer doctor working

here with me. He's fantastic. He went to the most famous universities in America and his board certified and trained in radiation oncology. And he's loved by his patients and their family and his staff and other members because he's so thoughtful and caring and considerate, and this is the work he does, and patients are lucky to have doctor Ariel Leaderman care for them. I went on after MD at twenty five to the Urosity of Chicago, Michael Resent Chicago, trained

in internal medicine three years, Board certified internal medicine. Then went on to Harvard Medical School, trained in medical oncology, which is a treatment of cancer at the famous Dana Farber Cancer Institute three more years, and was on the staff at Dana Farber at Harvard Medical School for more years. And then went on at Harvard Medical School to the famous Joint Center for Radiation Therapy three more years and in board certified, treated thousands of patients with cancers and now here

in New York for decades. So I'm real doctor MD, like doctor al Liederman, Board certified cancer doctor here for you. The only Harvard trained triple Board certified radiation doctor in New York, one of the few in the world. Here for you. So this is the work we do. You can always call us if you wanted two and two choices, two and two choices. You can tune in the radio. You can email at Leaderman Leaderman l E D E r m A n at R s N Y dot org. Leaderman l E D E r m A n at R s n Y dot

org. Or just stay and listen, which is a great thing to do. My name is doctor Liederman. We'll be 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 Leederman's patients with breast cancer were keeping their breasts. Doctor Leederman, an outspoken advocate 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 on two choices about breast cancer treatment.

Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. For a fresh second opinion, called doctor Leederman. Breast cancer treatment called two on two choices, two on 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 Katzer and my home was upside at the radio surgery the week choices. I'm so glad that may do. Want to thank Linn for the choices. Phone me and you

helio Ja Katz. It's my counting one, two, three, wells up? No more pays. Read your band that is such a free. Can't your treatment? Called doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices, called doctor Liederman. Welcome back to the radio surgery hours. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the w o R studios in the Hearts of New York's 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 in Basically, he was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liderman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD.

Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back. We are back, and I just want to tell you that we are live also that which means you can call us. We're live until the top of the hour till four o'clock. You can call us at one eight hundred three to one zero seven ten with your cancer questions. One eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. So cal No will pick up the phone and I'll give you right through to the radio. You'll be broadcast wherever all over the place. One eight hundred three two

one zero seven ten. We're live from now till four and then again from five to six today on WOR every week and then overnight from midnight to four thirty on WOR overnight if you can't sleep or want of the hear a lot of good shows it'd be a great time to listen. And then tomorrow Sunday will be live again from eleven to twelve noon and then from one to two and three to four. Tomorrow Sunday again eleven am to noon, one to two and three to four in the afternoon, and every night at midnight.

And so many people like to go to sleep with doctor Liederman. Many people like to wake up with doctor Liederman. Many people like to work with doctor Liederman every night at midnight on wor. So there you are, and we hope to hear from you soon. Now, recently I told you about patients who come, and some all come because they have treatment elsewhere and it's just not working. So I talk about this woman who comes from India. She's

fifty one years old, she's married, she came with her husband. Her husband works at one of the biggest hospitals, most famous hospitals in New York City. And this is a woman who developed neuroenderkin cancer. She had a cancer of the liver and she was diagnosed in the cancer not only was in

the liver, but it also traveled. She went to one of the famous doctors at a famous place and she had chemotherapy for more than a year, and she had shots and pills and she was getting treatment and she was told that everything was okay. But she was losing weight, she was getting pain in her arm. She could barely move her arm. She told the doctor. He said, well, just we'll see about it. And eventually she got an MRI. The MRI showed a big hole in her left arm and

her left humors of cancer. And she was told nothing. She was told nothing, and she's getting more and more pain. She was suffering. And this her husband worked at this hospital. He works at one of the most famous hospitals in New York where she was getting her treatment that obviously wasn't working,

and her doctors knew about it for months and months and months. With cancer growing, the cancer grew and it traveled to her ovaries, and the doctor told this patient, oh, it's just an inflammation of your ovaries. We have to cut out your ovaries. Well, the masses in your ovaries. One was the size of seven and a half centimeters, like a big melon, and there was also an enlarge mass on the other ovary, and rather than telling her what it was or doing a biopsy, he sent her

for surgery. At this same big hospital, which happens so often that people get the most invasive, the most expensive treatment that doesn't really work. It doesn't really work to cut out a stage four cancer, the travels to the ovaries. We're not even told about all the options. And she had been on chemotherapy. Chemotherapy was costing for her cancer two hundred thousand dollars a year, and again her husband was working at the same place. The husband was

a colleague. He was about as much of an insider as you could possibly be, and even then, being an insider at this big hospital, he took his wife there. He trusted the place where he worked, He trusted the doctors, and they got treatment that didn't work. And asked, well, why did they cut out you're ovar He said, Oh, they were inflamed. I showed them on the paper. The ovaries were filled, totally

filled with cancer, neuroendocrine cancer. And it wasn't there before it grew on the chemo, which meant that chemo wasn't working, and then then drew up a hole in her arm, growing with cancer and was totally ignored. It wasn't even given a sling to hold her arm. She was at risk to break the arm and ended up in the hospital with another surgery, and there was cancer growing elsewhere in her body. And she came at the end of

the day and we got two and two together. I was able to explain to the patient and her husband what was going on, that the treatment wasn't working, and the family was obviously so upset that they had trusted so much in the doctors at their own hospital. And we got approval immediately. We called the insurance company. We got approval immediately to start treatment on the arm to try to stop this cancer. And our success rate is about ninety percent

that were able to stop the arm before it breaks. Well, at the other place, she went months with more and more pain and more and more cancer eating through the humor's bone, the armbone, with nothing done. She came to me just walking down the street grabbing her arm in terrible pain. And it's such a difference. Within an hour, we were able to analyze her case, examine her, speak to her, get her records, explain to her exactly what's going on, get approval from her insurance company to start

treatment immediately to stop this cancer that was eating through her arm. What a difference it makes, and at that place, the other place, super duper General. Her husband works there that he goes to her treatments with a badge from the hospital. They know who he is. And yet still they didn't tell her what she had. They kept on giving her the same treatment.

When it wasn't working. They cut out her ovaries without telling her why, told her they were inflamed, and then left her arm in terrible pain, ready to break. What a difference it makes, and why so many people come here every day and have been coming every day for decades. What a difference it makes. How people are trained, how people behave. This is

the work that we do every day. And I can tell you a ninety percent chance we're able to heal the bone, the pain will go away, and then we all address if she wants the other cancer in the body. And we're the first in America, first in New York of course, in the Western hemisphere, with focused radiosurgery, non invasive treatment for new or recurrent cancers most anywhere in the body. And we could have easily treated those masses in the ovary had she come to us, had she even told what she

had. My name is doctor Leederman. We have Tony on the line. Hello, Tony, Yes, side doctor. My quick catch a question is this, what is the main difference between blood cancers, you know, which you do not treat, okay, and all the other cancers which you do treat. Okay. So most blood cancers that you're talking about probably are like leukemia. So there are cells that are floating through the blood stream. There's no focus, there's no focus for us to aim a beam in general.

But that's not always true either. There are some blood cancers that lodge in lymph nodes or lodge in the spleen, that are painful, that enlarge the spleen, that suck up all the blood cells. So there are times even even for blood cancers that we do treat. So nothing's one hundred percent in medicine. But usually usually cancers like leukemia, a cute leukemias are best treated

by systemic therapies, not radiosurgery. Okay. So if if particular blood cells are let's say trapped within the tissues of a particular organ, then you actually do treat those. We do treat it. Yeah. Yeah. Lictor syndrome we treat and treat very successful. I mean, we have people come with huge spleens, and the spleens are from blood cancers, and the spleens are sucking up, they're absorbing all the cells. And often people are very anemic

and their white counts are very low. And in that case, actually the spleen the massive cancer and the spleen melts away. Its incredible how it melts away from them, maybe a massive size of a pumpkin and shrinks down very very quickly with low doses of treatment. So there are cases that we do treat. Well, that's that's fantastic knowledge there. But if it's in the

bloodstream, well we'll talked about that because it's moving. So that's why you really can't you can't treat it. Oh okay, any other questions, Tony, No, that's it. That's good. That's what I wanted to know. Thank you, so mank you and God bless you. My name is doctor Liederman. I want to talk about this next patient who came this week, and every patient actually I'm talking about we came this week. This is a patient who had a recto cancer. It's a sixty eight year old person

from Trinidad, married Mayo with three children. Came with his wife. He had a sigmoid cancer and colonoscopy. So it had a five and a half centimeter mass. He was told the usual thing at the usual hospital, and he had surgery. He had surgery on the sigamoid cancer. And he had addinal carsonoma. It was growing into the fat around the colon. Four of twenty lymphanodes were positive. He had surgery. He had surgery, and he went to several of the biggest hospitals in New York City. He had surgery,

and well, he had this mass. It extended seventeen to twenty one centimeters from the anus. It was an apple corlegian, which means it went around the colon. He said he didn't have blood before, but he had blood six months prior to that time. And it's another point. You should easily get colonoscopy for everybody. Everyone should have colonoscopy on a regular basis. And there's more and more colon cancers in young people. So this man sad

to say, he wasn't diagnosed until the cancer was advanced. It spread around to colon, it was in the lymphodes. He had surgery, and well, he had the surgery and guess what, the cancer came right back where it was, so the surgeon was not able to get rid of the cancer. And we see that so often. Often after surgery, the most common place for the cancer to come back it is in the same place, whereas when we treat a cancer, ninety chance the cancer will never come back with

non invasive treatment here at radio surgery in New York. So it's such a huge difference. And often with surgery it may well be the surgeon that's spreading cancer cells or the cancers is very vicious and comes back either way. Sad news when a person goes through radical surgery like this person and the cancer comes back and he just the surgeon wanted to cut again, and then the patient said, no, you cut once and the cancer came back, Why should

I trust you again on the same area. And he invested in chemotherapy, understood it. With chemotherapy it cannot eradicate the cancer. Might shrink it for a few weeks or a few months, but chemotherapy cannot eradicate or cure this cancer. So this patient had several options. The surgeon wanted to cut again, justifiably, the patient didn't want again. He already had surgery surgery the first time is easier than surgery. The second time, he didn't want it.

The surgeon failed. He didn't want chemo because he understood chemo can't cure anyone in this condition. And he came to Radio Serdy in New York. I met with him. I told him he had about a ninety percent chance of eradicating the cancer where we aimed to beam. He had just a few treatments, non invasive, no cutting, no bleeding, and he was treated a long time ago, and now he is without symptoms, cancer free, doing well, with his blood counts better, his cancer mark is better,

his hemoglobein better after radiosurgery for his recurrent cancer. After surgery failed, chemo failed, and he just did not want more chemo and he did not want more surgery. This is the work we do, and we talked earlier about the kinds of patients we treated. We treated, and we treat This man had had other treatments didn't work, came here and is now in remission doing great. Minames Doctor Liederman. We took a show break 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 Liderman two and two choices, two and two choices to consider his prostate cancer treatment for you most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Call two and 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. Speedy recovery for defense chiefs secret prostate cancer surgery on Christmas Eve, not informing even the President returned an ambulance with pain absess bowl obstruction secret turned disaster. Sadly believed is zurologists. Like many with prostate cancer, radical prostate surgery has many

complications, leakage, impotence, shortening, inferior results, death. Thousands come to doctor Liederman to learn all prostate cancer options from New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified Radiation Oncologists. Defense chief sadly believed Pie and Sky promises another reason to meet doctor Liederman about highly effective prostate cancer treatment avoiding radical surgery. Best is to meet doctor Liederman. Call doctor Liderman two and two choices,

two and two choices, thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Leederman two and two choices thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Call doctor Leaderman two on two choices. Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the w R Studios in the hearts of New York City. Were just a few steps from the radio surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway

in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liederman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey doctor Liederman, We're back. We are back. I want to talk about a man who had prostate cancer who

was sent here. He was born actually in Haiti, was seen by one of the biggest urologists in town. This urologist who hates to do surgery on prostate cancer because he knows the success right is poor and it damages a man's sex life, it damages a man's urinary life at shortans of Penis who came, Well, it's a man from Haiti's seventy four years old. He had a glease and six PSA FI five point four prostate cancer. He was waking up at night to urinate. He had multiple cores positive. He single,

he had three children. We talked about all the options from nothing to everything, and he just wanted to be treated. He came nearly ten years ago. And this is a man treated for his Gleason six cancer and he's now cancer free. As PSA is zero, his sexual life is fine, his urinary life is fine. He has no ex pains, fevers, chills, and he's very happy with his treatment. And I we'll talk about a man who had a very high risk cancer. He came to us and his interesting

man. He came with his daughter who married his best friend. So there were two men both had prostate cancer and his daughter who had coordinated all the activity. They were at one of the biggest hospitals in New York and they heard about our work. This man came with a PSA of twenty three Gleason seven cancer. He's seventy three years old. He has diabetes, high blood pressure, and well. He wanted to be treated, to be treated by

us. He did not want surgery, did not want hormones. He was waking up twice at night to urinate and on physical exam he had in a large prostate. We offered all the options to him and he just wanted to have our treatment for a high risk cancer. Gleason seven PSA twenty three. So again Gleason scorees how the cancer looks under the microscope goes from two to ten to is the best ten as the most aggressive PSA normally is four. His was twenty three and he came to us ten years ago. Ten years

ago. It came with a very high risk cancer. He came. He only wanted our treatment, and now he came yesterday. His PSA is zero. And this is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. He came from the Caribbean. He was born in Barbados, and he is very happy and fully intact. And this is the work that we do every day. And another man, another man. He's a black man. And I say that because in the black community won in six black we'll get

prostate cancer. One in twenty three would die of prostate cancer. It's very aggressive cancer. He was born in Grenada. He's sixty eight years old. He has six kids. He had high blood pressure. He had prostate cancer. As PSA went up to five point three. He decided he wanted treatment and he was treated also ten years ago, ten years ago, and now his PSA is zero. He's fully intact. His sex life works, his urinary life works. And this is the work that we do every day at

thirteen eighty four Broadway. Now we're talking about a man who comes from Greece. Sixty four years old. He came with his wife. He has metastatic cancer. He's seen at one of the biggest hospitals. He had colonoscope. He had a colon cancer traveled to liver, so it was stage four. He had chemo and chemo and chemo and chemo and chemo. He had about two or three years of chemo. Didn't work. The cancer kept on growing at the biggest, most famous hospitals. He hit a mass on his airway

in the Krona. There was one centimeter three months ago now it's two point four centimeters same and the right lung and the left lung and the liver, and he cancer was growing. They kept on giving him chemo, chemo, chemo, and it just did not work. He's fed up with chemo. He came here from Greece wanting to have treatment that has a chance to control the cancer, improve his breathing, improve his pain, improve his symptoms.

And that's the work we do every day. People come from around the world for treatment, to come from all the biggest hospitals here because of innovative treatment, and people were told about all the options and learn a lot. I would tell you about ninety percent of the patients that we see learn much from

just meeting, just coming for consultation. They learn things that their doctors and others never told them, like that woman who came from India with cancer that went to the went to the ovaries and she was told, oh, her ovaries are only inflamed. And we'll talk about one more person today, special person. His name is Steve from Connecticut and today this weekend is actually his birthday. And it's also four years since he was treated. And we've talked

about him before. I just want to remind you this man, a very nice man, wonderful man, and his beautiful wife. He comes from Connecticut, he comes from Michigan. He sends in tomatoes. Why well, he came when his PSA had gone from two to three to four to six, and his doctors told him, Oh, don't worry about it, nothing's going to happen. That's what his doctors, his specials told him. Close to

home. And next thing he knew his PSA was sixty, and he went into a tizzy and he couldn't get anyone to answer his phone, and so he decided to call radio sort of New York because he listened to this program and he came here with the PSA he had gone from six to sixty. And then we repeated it. It was ninety and we ranged from immediately to get a biopsy of the prostate. He had never had a biopsy. Believe it or not. His PSA was high. He never had a biops he

never had staging, never had scans. We arranged for scans of his body, got MRIs, We've got bone scans, We've got a biopsy. We had an aggressive cancer. It was very aggressive cancer. This is four years ago and his PSA was ninety. He'd gone up from sixty to ninety in just a few days. I want to do another PSA before we started treatment, he didn't want and he didn't want any more bad news. And we started treatment with balky disease in the pelvis and balky disease in the abdomino area.

It's called retroperatanial nodes. And we put together a program for him and treated him with focused radiation. And now four years later, it's actually more than four years. It's his birthday weekend. Right now, four years later, his PSA is in the zero range, zero point zero four. He's doing great. He's traveling between his home in Connecticut and a home in Michigan. He's planting tomatoes and he's living the life and he has a beautiful wife,

and he has barbecue you'd steak dinners and good bottles of wine. And he's able to do that really because he decided to call two and two choices when his doctors wouldn't return his phone calls and we wasted no time. You can learn about his case. He often calls here. He listens to almost

every radio show. He's on our video and if you listen to our DVD, you'll hear him talking about his own cancer and his experience and how exasperated he was when his PSA was going up, up up, and he couldn't get anyone to answer his calls except for doctor Leiderman at thirteen eighty four Broadway. And he came here four years ago and his PSA has come down from more than ninety all the way down to the zero range. And this is

the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. So to you, Steve from Connecticut and Michigan and your beautiful wife, I'll we have a beautiful birthday weekend and a beautiful steak on the barbecue, and a beautiful bottle of wine, and beautiful tomatoes and beautiful memories, and we hope for many, many more years and you should live to be one hundred and twenty, as we say, one hundred and twenty, in good health and not

know from illness ever. My name is doctor Liederman. We're so happy to give you good wishes. So keep the faith, keep listening, and this is the work we do every day. I want to talk about another man who came to us from Jamaica. He's sixty six years old. He had a prostate cancer glease of nine. He had treatment with radiation elsewhere and the cancer came back in the lymph nodes. We're able to treat the lymph nodes

around the prostate where he had treatment before with our pinpoint treatment. He was so nervous, he was so nervous he was going to get sick. Well, he's had our treatment in the stereotactic frame from the doctor first with precision radiation in New York and America and the Western Hemisphere. This is the work we do every day, and he is doing great, having his treatment, no side effects. He's ambutory function, oh pain free. This is the

work we do. If you have a suspicion or a reason to get checked out. Please call us at two and two choices or email Gil at rs n Y dot org or call us two and two choices, get the booklet, get DVD, or listen to the radio show. We hope to get all your questions answered. Min name is doctor Liederman. We're here every day to try to answer your questions and concerns. 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 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 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 Leaderman to hit your cancer. Called two one two choices, two one 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 too. Want two choices, Conductor, They don't 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 choices is a much bad way too. Want two choices, Conductor, They don't mean today, Doctor Liederman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four Broadway.

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