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 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 with DVD two super convenient Broadway in thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liederman to hit your cancer, called two one two choices two one two choices. It's Doctor Leaderman 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 appointments Mate, Do 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 Leaderman two and two
choices. Welcome everybody. It's the Radio Surgery Show with Doctor Gil Leiderman, MD, New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist who brings you the latest cancer treatment news, interviewing world renowned cancer experts, delving to special cases, and of course answering your questions. I'm Rob Redstone, broadcasting from the WR Studios in the heart of New York City, and now please welcome doctor Leaderman. Thank you Rob, and thank you no and thank you for
listening today and every day on the radio. We're here every day. Why to learn together, to learn things to get better health healthcare. If God forbid you or your loved one or family or friend, or even that person down the street has a cancer, either a new cancer or recurrent cancer, or cancer just won't go away, he might learn a lot. And we know that radio listeners save lives. I know that because I meet patients every day and I talk to my patients, and I take notes, and I
come here and we talk about each of the patients who come by. You may not know exactly what their name is or their address, but you'll know enough to learn the lessons like this man. For example, I'm we talk about a man right now who's eighty six years old. He comes from Jamaica. He's widowed with four children. His high blood pressure is prostate cancer,
and he was on loopron, who was on hormones for twenty years. His doctor kept him on loopron for twenty years with inadequate treatment of his prostate cancer. It is he might say, no nuts, yeah, nuts, because lupron. First of all, there's a cost, there's side effects. Lupron is an anti testosterone agent, so it takes away his testosterone for twenty years. He's eighty six, and he's a spray man. He's fully active, he's carrying on all his normal activities. He came in I should tell you
he came in years ago. He came in years ago. He had inadequate radiation treatment elsewhere. He went elsewhere and his treatment was not adequate, not optimal, and his doctor put him on lupron. He bet him on this railroad, tracked lupron eternity, and well, finally the men got fed up with his doctor and he came here for a fresh second opinion. And so many people come here for fresh second opinions. So people come here and they want to know, Hey, do I have cancer? So they want to
check up. Some people come here when they want to know what should I do for my newly diagnosed cancer what are all the options, and we talk about all the options. Were so different than most places. It seems like most doctors kind of like sell what they do. The surgeons to surgery, chemo does chemo, and the radiation is no, we don't do it that way at all. We talk about all the options, and then there's people who've had cancer diagnosed in the past, like this man, and they're just
not satisfied. It took him twenty years. Twenty years of loopron. I can tell you lupron causes weakness, takes away testosterone, takes away sexual feelings and erections. There's weight gain and other things, none of which are very favorable. And he came to me and we got his records for twenty years, and the amazing good thing is that his cancer was localized and we offered him treatment. He came here years ago after he'd been treated elsewhere with inadequate
radiation therapy. Then he had loopron for twenty years, and the men was fed up with it. He just didn't want loupron. Another day, another minute, and he came here and we treated him years ago and now he
is cancer free, doing well with us. He just had a short course of treatment, not twenty years of treatment, not inadequate radiation, but he had focused treatment by the doctor first with radio surgery in the Western Hemisphere, when all the other places doing standard treatment, one doctor stood up and say, there's a better way. We should focus the treatment on the cancer,
not unhealthy tissue. And so many doctors and so many facilities and so many hospitals, and oh, that guy's a charlatan, when in fact it only makes sense that you should treat the cancer and not the healthy tissues. And this technology was never available or before, doctor Liederman. And this is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. So for this man, he had cancer, he was dissatisfied with his care. He came for
a fresh second opinion, and thank god we treated him. He's been cancer free for years after our treatment, with our treatment only no chemo, no hormones, no surgery, no cutting, no bleeding. And this is the work that we do every day. And we have lots of information to send you. We have booklets and DVDs. You can call our office and you
call now or whenever you want to get a package mailed to you. It no charge, is no obligation and many people come to our office in person and get a package or information for themselves and someone else, a friend or a loved one, someone in need. And I can tell you so many radio listeners pass on the word they hear about cancer. Often it's just even in a grocery store or restaurant. They're someone talking about cancer and they pat him on the shoulder and say, hey, you may want to see doctor
Liederman. This man came saw us thirteen eighty four Broadway, except his insurance. We put together all the facts, we've got his paperwork for twenty years, and then offered him treatment, all the options we talked about, all the options local, regional, systemic combination, even no therapy, and he chose our treatment and he's now cancer free years later. And this is the work we do every day for new or recurrent cancers, most anywhere in the
body. I want to talk about a woman who comes. She's a woman, she's a very elegant woman. She's eighty eight, she probably looks like she's fifty eight. She's very elegant. And her brother is a plastic surgeon, so he's someone who cuts, and he cuts on skin cancers. And he saw this lump on his sister's nose and it was biop seed, and in fact it was a skin cancer. And the brother, who's a plastic surgeon, said he you should not have surgery because her dermatologists wanted her to
have surgery on her nose. And she, the patient and her brother, who's a prominent plastic surgeon in New York City, said it's crazy. I don't want to be deformed. I don't want part of my nose missing. And it was right on the tip of her nose, and she had a biopsy. She came back to us, We discussed it. We discussed it with her, and she discussed it with her brother. And this is the work that we do every day, and so many people come to us with
skin cancer. In fact, there's three million Americans every year with skin cancer, and the vast majority, Sarah to say, have surgery. And so often the surgery is so deforming because surgery or moe's mohs moe's surgery is really like excavation in the part of the body, whether it's the nose, eyes, ears, cheek, hand, feet, or elsewhere on the body. And so many people just don't want to be deformed and sad to say. Sad to say when so many doctors who do Mo's most are to say,
oh, they can see the last cancer cell. Well, doctors can't see the last cancer cell. And it's not true in my view. And I can tell you how do I know that? Well, we see so many people who've had Moe's MOHS Moe's surgery whose cancer comes back right in the same spot. So obviously, if the surgeon removed the cancer, the last cancer cell, the cancer wouldn't come back in the same spot. So why does the cancer come back in the same spot after Mo's and usually MOSE's deforming surgery?
Why does it come back in the same spot because cancer was left behind because the doctor can't see the last cell. And it'd be great if it were true, but it's not true. And if it were true that the doctor could see the last cell, who would want deforming surgery in their nose or ear, or eye or mouth. Had a woman who came in yesterday and she has a skin cancer right on her lip. Young woman from Australia. She came here just for evaluation and she knows it with surgery, part
of her lip and face would be deformed. Probably she'd have difficulties speaking and eating, and probably everyone that looks at her. We look at this big scar, the hole in the lip, and who would want that? And she came here yesterday. We talked about all the options and she chose our treatment. Why because there's no cutting, no bleeding. There's a high success rate for treatment of skin cancers, approximately ninety five percent. It's a few
treatments, it's outpatient. You come in, get a treatment and move on. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty for Broadway. And in fact, we have a new book with DVD about skin cancer, and we'd be happy to send it to you, or you can pick it up, or you can call and make an appointment. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We have a huge experience over decades with thousands of patients treated, and we have a whole team that works together on
this project with high success. This is the work we do every day for newer, recurrent skin cancers. This patient had a cancer run on the tip of the nose. She and her plastic surgeon brother both agreed there's no reason to do surgery. It'd be deforming it wasn't wanted. She chose our treatment and now follow up. I just saw her recently. Her cancer is gone and her nose is perfect. Her cancer is gone and her nose is there, and she looks great. And no one would know that she ever had
treatment except for she and me, and I guess her brother. This is the work we do. It's like the old commercial, but Clara har Dyer, who know who knows between you and your hairdresser? Well, for skin cancer, it's only the patient and us, no cutting, no bleeding, high success, outpatient therapy. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. We accept most insurances. We have literature to send you. It's always best to meet in person. You can ask all
your questions. We can see you, and we can talk about you and get your records and discuss all the options. My name doctor Liederman. We'll be right back. Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when surgery didn't help and toxic chemo stopped working. Many come in pain. Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when their caregiver has no more care to offer. Doctor Liederman bringing innovative cancer care for decades, when the next cancer drug is
not as promised. When surgery was the fail to pass, we may be able to offer you new cancer treatment options. We treat new and recurrent cancers, small or large, most anywhere in the body, even if prior chemo, radiation or surgery didn't work. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices for a free booklet DVD thirty eighth and Broadway. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted, Harvard trained, Triple Board certified Doctor Liederman two
and two choices two and two choices for innovative cancer treatment. Best is to meet doctor Liederman in person. Call two and two choices two 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 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 Leederman, most experienced body radio surgery. Accepts most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid, thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth First in
America. Call doctor Leiderman 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 Leiderman,
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're back, and I want to talk about another skin cancer and a very famous person, Jimmy Buffett. Jimmy Buffett's well
known for his music, is well known for his restaurants. Marguerite Taville. Well, he had a skin cancer and he died. Sad to say of that skin cancer, and all this informations in the journals in Wall Street Journal, New York Times, for example. He died at age seventy six, and he died of merkel cell cancer of the skin. He had lots of sun exposure. He loved the son. He was out in the sun in Florida for many, many years, and very likely that sun exposure predisposed him
to this cancer. So why do we talk about him? Sad to say, to honor him and to recognize him and to remember him, of course, and also a warning sign. If you see an abnormality in your skin, you should get checked out. And I can tell you that we see many, many mercle cell cancers. It's said there's only twenty five hundred a year in America. Well, we see many merkle cells. We see many skin cancers, and I can tell you that our success rate for Merkle cell
cancer is very very high. Most skin cancers, there's about three million a year basal cell and squamous cell. But Merkle cell at twenty five hundred is a cancer. It's very well treated with focused radiation. This is the work we do. We have lots of experience, and sad to say we've lost a great entertainer and personality and human being, and sad to say, I
hope he's the last one that we lose from skin cancer. If you have blumps, bump, something new in your skin you're not certain about, come in, get checked out, see your dermatologists, get checked out, have a biopsy. That's always the best way, and give us it's a call. We have information to send you. If you wish, you can call us a two one two choices, two and two choices and her number is two and two choices because two and two means New York City and choices,
because we truly believe you have choices. There's almost always choices available for someone with a diagnosis of cancer or treatment of cancer, or even how to get diagnosed. There's different ways, different ways to do biopsies. There's easy ways and there's hard ways, and there's expensive ways and there's less expensive ways. And we always try to find the least invasive, least costly, and best way to diagnose a person, and then to offer all the options. And
this is the work that we do every day. At thirteen eighty for Broadway, I'll talk about a woman who comes to us from Haiti. She and her husband are are in a church, very prominent church in Brooklyn. She is sixty eight years old. She's a black woman. I said it because of the Black community. The death is about two hundred and fifty percent higher other groups. And we obviously treat men and women and children of every race
and religion and creed and color that you can possibly imagine. She's sixty eight years old, she's married, she has two children, says high blood pressure. She's had mestectomy. In fact, she said bilateral messed actomies. And I can tell you when I first came to New York, ninety seven percent of the women at the big hospitals were getting mestectomy for the treatment of breast cancer, whereas in my practice ninety percent of the women who were keeping their
breast. So there's a huge difference in treatment. And still we see women with messt ectomies and bilatteral messed actomies often women getting bilatterle messed actomies who don't even have a cancer in the other breast, And well we talk about that. That's why so important for women with breast cancer or a lump to give us a call and come in and talk about all the options before. Anyway, she had bilateral mestectomies and she had standard radiation and the cancer came back.
And also because of the mestectomy, she was left with a swollen arm, called them fedema. She had had chemotherapy, she had years of chemotherapy and the cancer was growing on the chemotherapy, and she was very torn. She's a very elegant woman and her husband's very elegant men and their head of
a church. They have lots of poise and personality. And we would chew the data and we went through her records and showed her that the cancer was growing on the chemotherapy elsewhere, So she was getting treated elsewhere and the cancer was growing growing, and that's obviously a bad sign. It's a bad sign, and the cancer is growing on treatment. And I can tell you in
reality, she had stage four cancer. She had lymph notes in the chest and diseased her lung that chemo essentially always fails, and most likely the chemo doctors will never tell you that. But chemo might work for a few weeks or months and then the cancer grows back, and that's exactly what it was
doing in her. And then she would change chemos and it worked less well and less well, and she was getting toxicity and side effects with a neuropathy or blood counts, and she had the side effect from the surgery with her arm being swollen, and she lost both breasts. And then she came here and it was a moment of enlightenment. And the first she didn't exactly trust me, so we had to prove to her, and we proved to her that the cancer was growing. We got new scans and showed her that even
on her chemotherapy the cancer was growing. That means it wasn't work. So she was paying On average, chemotherapy is between one hundred and two hundred thousand dollars a year, and we all pay for that. Everyone pays for that, and obviously, what good does it do when she's taken the chemotherapy. She's paying a lot of money and it's not working well. I would say it's doing no good. In fact, it's terrible, and we talked about all the options, and she chose to stop the chemo, even though she'd
been with her doctor for many years. The doctor had been giving her chemo, and the doctor got hundreds of thousands of dollars with the hospital and it didn't work. She came here. We found the cancer in her lung and in her lymph node, and we treated that. She had just a few treatments to her lung and lymph node, and now she's cancer free in remission and it's beautiful rather than chemo every week. She had a few treatments last
year, she's been in remission. She's still in she's doing great, and she has more time to herself, less side effects, less cost, and more precise treatment. Chemo goes everywhere. It's like a poison that goes throughout the body. It's like putting your body in a bath of a poison versus
our treatment, which is focused on the cancer totally. The opposite. Our treatment is focused with about a ninety percent success rate for the rest of the life of the patient, versus chemo, which is poisoned throughout the body really and the cancer always comes back. So for her, she trusted me, and I'm grateful for that, and her husband trusted me. We treated her pinpoint treatment, non invasive treatment, and now she is in remission, no
evidence of cancer. And this is the work we do, and this is why we are here in the radio, so you can learn and you can tell your friends and neighbors and even the person down the street that you might know is suffering from cancer that there are options. This elegant woman was getting chemo and the cancer was growing, and sad to say, her doctors didn't
even tell her that the cancer was growing. I want to introduce myself because there's so many people on the radio and so many people in general talking and giving advice who are not really, in my view, fit to give advice. So I take a couple of minutes to explain who I am and describe who I am. My name's doctor Gil Liederman. I was born and raised
in Waterloo, Iowa. I went to public school, university, medical school, MD at twenty five, real doctor MD at twenty five, Not a do not a nurse, not a Hamburger helper, not a publicist, no a real doctor MD. Like my brother Ted MD at twenty five and my son, my handsome, smart, compassionate son Doctor Ario Liederman, also MD ATWE twenty five. There's three doctor Liederman's, all real doctors. MDA twenty
five let arial Leaderman trained. He's board certified in cancer radiation therapy, trained at some of the biggest facilities across America, and he's now working at thirteen eighty four Broadway, and his patients are lucky to see him. Lucky because he's thoughtful and caring and compassionate and complete. He's real doctor MDA twenty five,
Board certified. Here for you. I after MDA twenty five from the University of Iowa, went on to Chicago Michael Reese training internal medicine for three years, board certified, went on to Harvard Medical School, trained at prestigious Dana Farber Cancer treat treated thousands of cancer patients on the staff at Dana Farber, and then went on at Harvard Medical School to the Joint Center for Radation
Therapy again three years of training, thousands of patients. Board certified. The only Harvard trained triple board certified radiation doctor in New York and one of the few in the world. Here for you accepting most insurances, Medicare Medicaid here for you at thirteen eighty four Broadway. We have cancer questions or the possibility
of cancer. You're always welcome to come in if you have new diagnosis or recurrent cancer, when other treatments aren't working, aren't tolerated, it's always best to meet in person. We don't do phone consults because there's so many mistakes. You can't examine the patient, we can't see the patient. It's just fraught with danger. We like to give the patient the best chance to have the best advice, and that's why we meet in person. My name is
doctor Liederman. I want to tell you one more secret today, and that is that we're on the RADIOWR every day. We're live on the radio from now on for the next I Guess till four o'clock, and you can call us at one eight hundred three to one zero seven ten. If you have cancer questions, you want to talk about cancer, cancer questions topics we talk about call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. We won't embarrass you. You don't have to tell anyone your name if you don't
want to one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. From now till four and also be back from five to six and then tomorrow Sunday will be again on WR from eleven to twelve noon and then from one to two pm and three to four pm. Also, you can listen to doctor Liederman every night at midnight on WR. 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 night. And one more thing,
You don't have to have a radio to listen to the radio anymore. You can listen on your smartphone. You can listen on your computer. We have people listening in China and India, and Africa and Bangladesh, you name it. People around the world listen to this program all on their computer. So even though we are on a fifty thousand watt stations broadcasts halfway across America, you can listen anywhere in the world to this program. And we're here every
day for you. Just tune in, 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 Liederman's patients with breast cancer, We're keeping their breasts. Doctor Liederman, 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 thoughts standard radiation was okay, doctor Liederman 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 home suboda the radio surgery reader ches so good. Well to thank doctor and you Eliot Jr. Katzer, it's not counting
two three? Well up, No read your band that is so too free for cancer treatment. Called doctor Leederman two and two choices, two and two choices, Call doctor Liederman. Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the w o R 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 non 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 Leader in at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back. We're back, and we have a special guest. We have Sean Conry on the radio. Hello, Sean love quite come on that. I was told it's double seven? Oh sure
is? Oh yeah, it's double seven. But everyone knows W seven is Sean Conry? Everyone knows that. Yeah, well I know that, that's for sure. Where's your Scottish accent? Yeah? Well I lost it. I've been in America too long, so I know who you are because you're double O seven and many people, actually many many listeners KNOWBO seven, but you're the real double seven. Right, Oh yeah, definitely. Maybe some people don't know who the real double seven is. So maybe you can tell
the listeners who you are. Okay. In two thousand and five, eighteen years ago, doctor Leedhaman treated me, no, no, no, no no. Your story goes back further than that. You had a PSA of three and your doctor told you were home free. Right. Well, okay, I was in the good habit of taking a annual physical, and I also was obsessed with keeping the results filed away. And I noticed approximately the year two thousand that my PSA was point eight. The next year it was
a little bit higher. Up until two thousand and five it went up to three point three. And your doctor told you, hey, your everything's okay. Your PSA is only three point three. Right. Well, well, because you know that this number, that the number four, which was the then arbitrary number, arbitrary number, right right, So I said, you know, I mean I had to mentioned it. I said, why don't we have a little biopsy here? I have a biopsy on my prostate.
You told your doctor, Hey, my PSA is tripled, tripled. It went from zero point eight to three and a quarter. It tripled even more, quadrupled. Sure, I ended up having prosject cancer sad so for two thousand and five, so almost twenty years ago, right, yeah, And he, you know, he suggested surgery, and I said no. What did you say? No? I mean surgery, No, surgery is the
most common treatment for prostate cancer. But I hardly believe. Well, well, I didn't want to get operated on the side effects for incontinent sex life is gone, you don't really have one anymore. And them, So what did you think? Why did he propose surgery if he knew that, I mean, he'd operated on other people, he knew that they would take away your sex life, he knew that he would cause leak each of the year, and he knew he'd caused shortening of the penis. Why would he do
that? Because this is their their way of curing, of putting you in all they think, putting you into remission for the cancer. Just to read I think, excuse me, excuse me, double seven. I think it's not the way of curing. I think it's not the way of premission. It's their way of treating prostate can treating. Yeah, okay, because the treatment. I mean, if you look at our data versus surgical data, our data is by far superior, more likely to be cancer free with us
than with the surgeon. Well, yeah, I'm a testament to that because it's been eighteen years. I mean, well eighteen years. So what happened? So twenty years ago you had this say, you were smart and you still are smart, and you insisted in a biopsy when your doctor told you, hey, everything's normal, and you were right. You had a cancer. Oh yeah, I did. Right. Then they want to have your surgery, and you were smart again. You refused the surgery because you didn't
want to be impedent and inconinent and shortened. Right, you were double smart. Right. Well, the shortening is something I just found out about from you over the last couple of years, where you have mentioned that, which is like a plumber when a plumber, when a plumber cuts out a segment of a pipe, he has to bring the ends together to make that pipe work. And the same is true with the urethra. The ereather is a tube from the bladder out to the rest of the world through the penis.
If they cut out the urethra, which is inside the prostate, they have to reconnect it, which shortens the tube. It shortens the penis. Yeah, yeah, like I said, you you inform me of that over the radio, mentioning it by the radio people. The radio people got very nervous that I talk about this organ which I think most of the world knows that half of the world has one on half zoned right. So anyway, why do you come to me? Why did you Why did you not just take
that surgery that he proposed? Well, because your your treatment was a very I can only say, very easy to do. It's very easy explain it to people who don't know what I do. Yeah, after you go through the testing, proceeded to map out actually where the cancer is. The doc calls it staging the office there you you get The doctor calls it the stereotactic frame. It's a mold of the back of your body. So you lie in the same position every time you get the treatment. They put you on
the table. Doctor says it's computerized. So you lie on the table, you lie on the frame or mold, whatever you want to call it, and device goes over your body, pinpoint radiation to the prostate. That maybe takes about ten minutes, and you'll find there's no side effects, there's no after effects, there's nothing at all. You get dressed and you go and
do whatever it is that you'll do. In my case, I was still working at the time, so I took a little time off about approximately an hour from our meaning the traveling time to get to doctor's office, get the treatment, and go back to my office was approximately an hour's time, and I was able to complete my day at my work. Okay, well, didn't even tell people how great you are. You ride a bicycle to work
or just twenty miles or so to work and from work. You go to work, you got your treatment, you went back to work, you worked a full day, and then you carried on normally. Right. Yeah. Bicycle, Yeah, that was my way of getting to my office. As crazy as that sounds, I use a bicycle to work every day. Well, it's not crazy. It keeps your great health. It keeps you great health. I mean, how many people who have radical surgery could be riding
a bicycle to and from work on the same day. No, No, if you had radical surgery and you know you are incapacitated for a while, you know, because you got a heel and something I just didn't want to deal with. You know, I have these a question. When they do the processing operation, how do they get to it from the front. Well, there's different ways you can you can do it. You can do it through the bottom or from the front, because there's different ways open surgery or
leposcopic surgery, NDO scoptic surgery. How but I want to talk to you a minute. I a question. You actually know how surgery is because you had a very good friend of yours who at the same time you had treatment. That man that you played bach You with had surgery. Right, Oh yeah, he had robotic surgery, that's what he right? And how did how did he fare? Robotic surgery is supposed to be so fantastic? So
this is one of your good friends and you saw him every day. Yeah, yeah, he Ronnie uh got robotic surgery for his bust state and for about approximately a month after it, he had to wear a cat at him. Okay, let's put it that way. And he, you know, told me some personal stuff that his sex life wasn't the way was before the surgery. It's yeah, And like I I'm not really sure what happened to him, what the other things had happened to him. Okay, it did
come back. That I know it did come back. The cancer did come back. He went through some radiation treatments because there's normal prostata to remove, so they gave him radiation treatments and slowly but surely his health declined and we lost track of him. But I later found out that he had passed away. I can't really say why he passed away, but he did pass away, and that the point at which he got the robotic surgery. From that
point on, his health just declined afterwards. So's their advice for someone who has prostate cancer, prostate disease, anybody who has broadstay cancer. You're listening out there, don't hesitate to go to doctor lead him and because he has the treatments that takes care of it. He has a great staff of people there. It's very comfortable to be there. It's not like, you know, you don't feel like there's a black cloud over you. It's very nice,
very very comfortable. And like I said, the treatments are basically what I said. You go in, you get treated. You got a little treatment for practically ten minutes under the machine, the radiation machine, and you leave and that's it. You do whatever other you want we're doing before you got there, you know, you just continue your life. There's no side effects. So right now it's almost twenty years later, are you still riding your bike? Oh yeah, yeah, definitely, you know, well,
weather permitting, lighting. The lighting gets a little strange at this time of the year because I like to go out early in the morning, but I can't go out early. No, But but my biking is just just as not as much as it was twenty years ago. But I definitely bicycle every day every day that I can do. You have any limitations or changing your life from the definitely, no, no, a little bit to The only
limitations is that I'm getting older and well that's a good thing. Yeah, oh yeah, definitely yeah, And that maybe you have a girlfriend and you have normal life and you do other things you want to do, right Oh yeah, yeah, that's yes. My got my crazy grandchildren that I sometimes I watch them sometimes they come here and uh yeah, I lead a normal but you know, people that I didn't would not think know you're on the radio no, you're on the radio. But they asked me. You know
I what I mentioned? Yeah, you know I was treated by doctor lead Him for busse cancer. Oh he's on the radio, isn't he. I said, yeah, yeah, if you listen to him, If you listen to the radio, if he ever mentions double O seven, that's me. I tell him. Well, it's nice that you called today. We have to go for to break for a minute. But you have any other advice for listeners today? Yeah, I'm not really good. Don't hesitate if you have any kind of cancer. It's I mean, I just happen to have
prosty cancer. If you have any type of cancer, go to doctor lead Him. I have one more question for you, do you you know you've known me for almost twenty years. Has anything ever happened between us in the office that gives you any qualms or hesitations about your care or interaction? Oh no, not at all. No, You're you're a you're like a friend to me, you know, I mean, you're my doctor, but you're also Will Will We have a little friendly, little relationship going there, which
is nice, which is good. That's that's how I will prefer things. Actually, all right, Well, God bless you, and God bless your family, and I hope you lived at one hundred and twenty years old in good great me too. Oh, God bless you. I'll be right back. Numbers mean much to me because of prostate cancer. I'm Johnny Bragg's The number two from my stepfather who died of prostate cancer and my uncle who suffered
so much after prostate cancer surgery. The number fifteen fifteen years since doctor Leederman's successful treatment of my prostate cancer. The number zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor Leaderiman's successful prostate cancer treatment. What every man wants? The numbers one, two, three, four important for every man with prostate cancer. One getting the most successful treatment, two avoiding radical robotic surgery, three
keeping sexual functions, four maintaining urinary control. Call my doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices to consider his prostate cancer treatment for you most insurances, Medicaire and Medicaid accepted. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth called two and two choices for prostate cancer treatment. Called doctor Liederman two and two choices. I'm glad I did. You'll be number one with doctor Liderman.
It's doctor Liederman speaking with Lauren about lung cancer. You were seen by a pulmonary doctor who was insistent that they open up your chest. Yes, absolutely, and they told you to the lung surgeon and they were insistent on cutting on you right absolutely, and would not accept me hesitation 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 just opened up and you're 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 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, nake your first up doctor Liederman. For more information called doctor Leederman two and two choices thirteen eighty four, Broadway 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 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 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, and I thank seven for confiding and informing all of
you about his experience and what's happened to him over twenty years. And he's now cancer free, and we're grateful for his trust and really for his kindness and calling. I want to talk about a woman who's eighty five years old. She's from Jamaica. She's a black woman. And I say that because it's very rare to have skin cancer in black people. It's not unheard of. Bob Marley, for example, had skin cancer to the melanoma of his toe that went to his brain and he died of that. So that's one
example of a melanoma. But this woman had a basal cell cancer right on the bridge of her nose. She has a history of high blood pressure and diabetes and thyroid disease. She had skin cancer of her arm also, that was true with surgery. What was she do up to skin cancer on her nose and she just did not want to have a part of her nose removed. It was a base of cell cancer, It was fairly prominent, and it was in a delicate position. It was the top part of the nose
on the left side, also near the tear duct. So surgery would have been deforming and debilitating, because if a person loses her tear duct, then there's no place for the tears to go easily readily as God designed our bodies, and so it would have been deforming and difficult. And said, she
chose treatment here. She came here and investigated treatment. She heard so much about skin cancer treatment here and we treat many many people, thousands in fact, over decades that she came and we talked about it, and she trusted us and was treated just in a few treatments for her basal cell cancer on the bridge near the bridge of her nose. Her and now she is cancer free. She came for follow up. She's doing great. And this is
the work that we do every day. At thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. We're talking about a woman who's forty six, so a very young woman. She's forty six, she works in the pharmacy. She's married, she has two children. She came with her husband. She had bronchitis and then asked for a CT scan because she had bronchitis so much, and the child a nodule in along and
then the scan was repeated it had grown. And then she was taken to surgery and she had a PET scan a big one of the super duper big hospitals. She had surgery. She had surgery one of the big hospitals in the New York area, and she had a squamous cancer the lung. She had multiple lymphanodes that were positive for cancer. So they saw the nodule and then they waited. They waited to work her up, and they waited to treat her. And by the time the cancer traveled to the lymph nodes,
so she had an advanced cancer. And well, she came to us when the cancer recurred after surgery. So what's so amazing is so many people think, oh, I'm going to have surgery, I'm going to cut it out, and I'll be done with my problem. Well, no, this woman had surgery and the cancer came back right at the same spot where the cancer was at a time of surgery. So it makes you think almost that the surgeon can spread the cancer cells when they're cutting on it. It came back
right at the same spot. And she came to us years ago, and we treated her years ago, and she's now in remission. We were able to treat the cancer when surgery failed for her squamous carcinoma of the lung. She'd had surgery at one of the big hospitals in New York. The doctors had waited to check her out rather than to operate immediately. She was don't have cancer, she had surgery, and now she's in remission. When surgery
failed. She came here for a fresh second opinion, And many people come for a fresh second opinion for newly diagnosed cancer, or like her, when the other treatment standard radiation, surgery or chemo, doesn't work or isn't wanted or isn't tolerated. In her case, it just didn't work, and she came to us to try to give her a second chance when surgery failed. And speaking about surgery failed, I want to talk about him mate, seventy two years old. He's single, and he has a cancer of the urrotor.
The urder is a tube from the kidney down to the bladder. So somehow the kidney makes the urine. The urine has to flow down the urder to the bladder. Well, he developed a cancer of the urtor and he went to one of the big hospitals in New York area. He had had chemotherapy and surgery. The surgery left positive margins, meaning the cancer was left behind, so the chemo didn't work. The surgery didn't work. The cancer was left behind right where it was before, in a way like that woman
who's cancer in the lung came back in the same spot. So sometimes it's hard to explain to patients how surgery fails. So often we just talked about a case where the surgery failed to the lung. Now here's a surgery failing in the urder. The cancer came right back and it was invading into the sois muscle. So the soest muscle is a muscle in the back of our abdomen helps us move our leg So this cancer was aggressive right in the same
area the cancer was left behind. He came to us for treatment and he was recently staged up and that area that we treated is still cancer free. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. A man who comes to us with two squamous cancers on the hand on the right hand. He came to us years ago, seventy eight years old, born in
New York City. He's widowed, he has two children, and he did not want to have a big part of his hand removed, and for that reason he came to us for skin cancer squamous carcnoma, two separate sites in the hand. Both treated, both in remission, doing well, no cutting, no bleeding. And we'll talk about a man who sixty six years old came to us many years ago with a Gleason nine cancer, a very aggressive cancer, and he chose our treatment because he knows with surgery the failure rate
is high with surgery and the complication is high. He wanted to keep his sexual life in urinary life, and now years later his PSA zero. He's in remission. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. We have lots of information to send you. It's best to call us two and two choices. My name is doctor Liederman. God bless you and thank you. Hope to talk to you soon. 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 one two choices. That's two one two two four six four two three seven. That's two one two two four six four two three seven. For cancer treatment, most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal
too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York, First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor 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, two 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 one two choices. Did you know that you've got choices? That there can be a bed way? Did you know that you've got choices? Call doctor Leader meets today. Choice is a much bad way, too want two
choices, Conductor Leader mean today. Did you know that you've got choices that there can be a bad way? Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor Leader mean today? To want to choices a much bad way? Too? Want too choices, Conductor Leader mean today. The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed.
