The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed for cancer treatment. Most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York, First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liderman hits your
cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers from head to toe. Cancer treatment with possibly a second chance for you even if chemo radiation or surgery didn't work or isn't tolerated. Goals are your best results and quality of life. Meet doctor Leaderman to hit the cancer. He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified
radiation oncologist. Call two one two choices two one two choices to meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Free book DVD two super convenient Broadway in thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to hit your cancer. Call two one two choices two one two choices. It's Doctor Leaderman with Carrie Stubbs, who sings and writes about his cancer treatment. Thirteen eighty foward Broadway and thirty eight. Cataplane hop a train don't has
a taate? 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 hospital stay, 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 the toleeder
Men's top right. 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 Noah, and thank you for tuning in today and every day, every day we're on the radio, and every day we learn together, and every day our goal is the same. Our goal is better health. We're not selling anything. We're talking about health and health care, and we're trying to learn through patient care. Through each patient who comes here, I take notes and you learn everything about the patient. We don't know their name, or their date of birth, or
who exactly they are, but you have a pretty good idea. It's enough for you to learn. Just like in medical school, and we start out, we learn patient by patient to learn about disease number one and two, and three and four, and soon it's ten thousand and one hundred thousand. And that's what's experience. That's why people like experienced doctors. That's why people like to go to the doctor with the most experience and we know who the
doctor with the most radiosurgery experience is in the Western hemisphere. The doctor who first performed and has treated thousands, actually tens of thousands of patients, Doctor Liederman. And guess who. Doctor Liederman is always here on the radio talking with you. And we're going to learn together today. So you should always take a paper and pencil and take notes. We'll give you some things that you might want to write down. If you have questions, we'll talk about
that too. And we're going to jump right in, and I want to talk about a woman really made a big impact on me. She's eighty five years old. She's very spry and looks great, and she had abdominal pain. She had a scan of her body a year ago. She had a scan of her body a year ago, and there was a small mass, a small mass in your kidney. And usually when you have small mass in
the kidney, small mass means it could be cancer. And she went to a urologist and the neurologist did what sad to say, most eurologists do. They said, well, we've got to remove that kidney. She's eighty five years old, and I can tell you I see so many patients with kidney cancer. I see so many patients with almost every kind of cancer. I should add that probably have the largest experience in New York, one of the largest in America treating cancer over decades. So urologists. The eurologist is a
surgeon who operates on the kidneys and the urinary system. The eurologists told the patient, Oh, you've got to remove that mass. You've got to remove your kidney. Maybe I can be part of your kidney, we'll see, but you've got to remove that and do it surgically. That's the only way. So the patient said, well, how do I know it's cancer if you're going to cut out my kidney? What happens if you're wrong and it's not cancer? And the doctor said, oh, you can't remove the kidney
without with a biopsy. A biopsy might spread the cancer. Well it's falsehood number one, number one. I've seen so many people with cancers and kidney cancers and other cancers, and I've actually never ever seen the cancer spread by a biopsy. I've seen cancer spread by surgery. I've seen cancer spread by removing the kidney or removing the breast, moving the prostate, and the cancer comes right back. But I've never ever seen it with a tiny little needle.
So why would the surgeon not want to have a needle biopsy. Well, I can tell you from my experience about ten percent of the time when we see people with kidney cancers and other cancers, the biopsy shows there's no cancer, even if sometimes we repeat the biopsy, no cancer. And that means a patient like this nice eighty five year old woman doesn't need treatment, It doesn't need surgery, doesn't need to be in the hospital. Does it
need to risk your life during radical surgery if there's no cancer. But the surgeon doesn't want her to know if there's cancer or not. He wants to keep her in the dark. And what do I think it's from why? I think it's a surgeon just wanting to cut on the patient, and I think it's a surgeon not wanting to do what I think is the right thing. I think the right thing is to get a biopsy to prove it or
not. And as I said earlier, about ten percent of the patients I see with masses and the kidney have masses that are not cancer and don't need treatment. Sad to say this urologist and many many, not all, but many many eurologists remove the kidney, throw it in a bucket, and that's the end of it. That's the end of the kidney. And that's pretty sad. Now, what happens if the patient wakes up the next day and the patient walks sees the surgeons, Oh, I have good news. There
was no cancer. And then the patient thinks to herself, well, hey, you just cut out my kidney, and my kidney had no cancer, and you cut it out and you can't put it back. You've stolen my kidney for no reason. And what does the surgeon say then, oh, whoops, Well I had to do it. Well that's not a good answer. That's a lousy answer, a lousy answer. So that's issue number one.
I don't believe that the patient was told the truth about biopsies. I don't think the patient she was told the truth about spreading the cancer biopsies. I have not seen that. Having treated thousands of patients over forty five years, I have not seen that. Number two, the patient had her last scan a year ago, so the doctor didn't even know if the cancer grew
or not. And we know the cancer grows, so wouldn't the doctor want to have a current scan, a new scan to see if the cancer's bigger and to see if the cancers spread to lymphanodes or bones or lungs or liver or elsewhere. Wouldn't the patient want to know if the cancer's growing and where it's spread, if it's spread, wouldn't the patient want to know that? Well, the surgeon didn't want to know that. The patient said, well, why don't I get a new scan? And the ser said, oh,
it's not necessary, you just had one last year. That's ludicrous. How can you expect to have a competent doctor take care of you when they don't even have a current scan or study or MRI or PET scan or cat scan to evaluate the patient? And certain tests are better than other tests. MRIs are great to look at the kidneys, pet scans great to look at the rest of the body. And those are the things that should be done
when you have a cancer. You'd like to know if you have it, you have a biopsy to prove it or is it only someone saying, well, maybe missus Jones, you have a cancer and number two, where is it? Well, this woman didn't know anything. She didn't know anything except she had a scan a year before that said, oh, it's a little bit suspicious. Well, she then came to me. A friend of hers came and told her, hey, you should go see doctor Liederman and get
a fresh second opinion. I understand he treats a lot of people with cancer, including a lot of people with rare and unusual cancers, and a lot of people with common cancers, and a lot of people with kidney cancers. Why don't you go see doctor Liederman. So this patient when she came in, she seemed very reluctant and very skeptical. She came with her best friend, which is great. It's great to come with someone else. I always
encourage that, or your family, that's always great. And we talked and talked and talked, and I examined the records and a year ago she had a small mass in the kidney and there was no spread, and she only had a study of the kidney area. She had no skin to look at the lungs or bones or pelvis or other parts of the body. Nothing and nothing recent and no biopsy. So I said, look, if it was me, I would want to know where the cancer is and if it's a
cancer. Why would you want to even remove your kidney if you don't know what it is. So slowly, slowly, she understood that I was trying to help her. I was trying to do the right thing. I wasn't pushing her to have treatment that was unnecessary. I was encouraged her to have a work up that was appropriate. And that's what we do here at New York. And you'll see when you come, if you come the art of radios there's lots of art on the wall, the art of radiosurgery, and
there's much discussion about the options. Unlike this surgeon who seemed to want to hide the options, we encourage the options. We talk about chemo and immunotherapy, and we talk about surgery. We talk about standard radiation and radiosurgery and combination therapy and even no therapy or hospice. We talk about it all. It's on the wall. Every patient walks out with a booklet describing options.
And we think it's incumbent on us. We think it's a moral thing to do to explain the options to the patient, not just push something on a person who that's inappropriate. And I think pushing this woman to have her kidney removed was inappropriate. And so finally she said, I said, go home and think about it. You know, I don't push anybody. Go home and think about it. You go home and think about it. Think about what I said, and think about the surgeon said, and think about what
makes the most sense to you. And I got up to leave the room, and she said, Dr Liederman, Doctor Liederman, I want to do what you said. I want to get a biopsy and I want to get a scan. And so within about an hour, she went from thinking she had to have that surgery and trusting the urologist to understand that eurologist wasn't telling her all the options. The urologist was declining or refusing to get a biopsy of this mass. This urologist was declining or refusing to get a new scan
of her. And we got a new scan, and a new scan showed this mass grew one thousand percent. What was small before was large, now one thousand percent bigger. Lucky for her, we scanned her whole body, and lucky for her, it didn't travel. And this is the work we do. And the biopsy shows cancer, and this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four broad Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City, and we treat kidney cancer. Our treatment is
non invasive and outpatient and there's no cutting and bleeding. And for this patient, we would make a body mold, a mold of the body, would computerize the body, we'd send it in thousands of invisible beams to focus on
that cancer. All are focused on that cancer from thousands of angles. And the patient gets up a few minutes later and goes home, or goes to lunch, or goes across the street to Macy's or Brian Park, or lives her life which is so different that if she had had radical surgery to remove that cancer, the convalescence and she would never have that kidney again. And many people with kidney cancer on one side get it on the other side.
Some many people are smokers, or been exposed to smoking, or been exposed to a household or their parents, sad to say, smoked in the presence of the children. And often there's more ultiple cancers of the urinary system. It's called a field defect. And so what do you do? Then you lose your kidney today, and then what happens tomorrow. If you have a kidney cancer on the other side, then you say, hey, doctor Leiderman, save my life, save my kidney, or you can do that from
day one. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty for Broadway Broadway and thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. Whether it's for head of net cancer or brain cancers, our skin cancers, lung, breast, pancreas, liver, kind ofcologic guests from testino bladder, prostate, primary cancers, metastatic cancers. This is the work we do with high success, where we attack the cancer. And there's lots of reasons
you might want to learn more about radio surgery. If you have a cancer, you're welcome to come in. If you have a suspicion of cancer, or you just want to get a checkup, you'll know about your prostate or your breast, or your lung or whatever. Give us a call at two one, two choices. My name is doctor Liederman at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid, and can call us now or whenever or
never at two one two choices to one two choices. That's two one two two four six four two three seven two one two two four six forty two thirty seven. My name's doctor Liederman. Radio stir to New York third thirty four Broadway. 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 failed pack us, 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 lust her face, vision, hearing and smell by doctors she felt walked on water. Water is gone. Cancer is back. Woman lost her entire arm, cancer resed 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 radio surgery. Accepts most insurances Medicare, Medicaid, thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth First in America. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices. Call doctor 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 non invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the West Stern 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, and I
want to talk about a fifty six year old man. He's a man actually that caught the Times Square terror someone who's going to blow up a bomb in Times Square years ago. He's fifty six years old. He's single, he has one child. He was diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma Hodgkins disease a couple months ago. One of the biggest hospitals in New York. He had to work up there. He never got a pet scan. A pet scan is a great test for Hodgkins. He tends to show you with great detail if the
Hodgkins has traveled. He had pelvic pain he had pin in his legs. He had this big mass in his neck. He was hospitalized in this big super pooper hospital for weeks. He had headaches, his hearing was diminished. He lost some teeth. He lost one hundred pounds, going from two eighty to one eighty. Six foot two. He's an ex smoker. He has coffee. He had shortest of breath. He had colonoscopy twice. There was
a hole between his intestines and his bladder, and in the urine. He had stool feces, and well, he saw the doctors at this super pooper place. They wanted to give him chemo for Hodgkins's. He's remember they never staged him up fully. They wanted to give him chemo, and they weren't going to give him chemo because there was a hole between his rectum and his bladder, in his urine, he had feces, so he had no care. He had no care for that fistula, He had no care for his
Hodgkins. He lost one hundred pounds, and he was in dismay, in great dismay, and he came here. A friend of his said, hey, you might want to see doctor Liederman. Remember that radio listeners save lives, and I believe radio listeners like you helped him most likely save his life. And he came to me and we staged him up. We staged him up, immediately got petst scan, We got all his records, and we found yes, there was a hole between the bladder and the rectum, but
was not cancerous. His Hodgkins disease was confined only to the left neck. On physical exam, he had a mass about the size of a plum right by his mandible on the left side and the left neck. The pet scan showed multiple infanodes in the neck only. There was no spread of the Hodgkins lymphomas. It was a localized cancer. It did not show any cancer in the palvis either. So we talked about all the options. He had seen
chemo doctors at the Super Big Hospital. They told him he needed chemo, but they weren't going to give him chemo until the hole in his coal and was repaired. And he didn't want to have surgery on his coal and he didn't want to have colostomy. He didn't want to have surgery. He wanted to be treated for his cancer, and well made perfect sense. He just didn't not want colostomy. He's willing to deal with the contaminated year. And he wasn't sick from it, he didn't have any fevers from it, and
he just did not want to have a colostomy. And I believe everyone is the President of the United States of his or her body. And at the other place, they just weren't treating him. He had a vicious cancer that was growing and had symptoms, and yet no one was treating him. And he came here, and he put together a program to take care of his colon, to take care of his Hodgkins, to take care of him, even writing letters for his loved ones and lawyers and so on, who's going
through a vicious divorce. And so now he's on treatment, and so he has an early stage to Hodgkins disease with a high degree of success even without chemo if he does not want chemo. So he talked about all the options. I arranged him to see a chemo doctor, so he can combined modality therapy if he wants. You can have radiation only if he wants. And
he's already started treatment and the mass is going away. And this is the work that we do every day to try to find options rather tell him, Hey, you just got to go see a surgeon have a colostomy, and I'm not going to treat it, and I'm gonna let the cancer grow. That's what they told him at the other super pooper place. Here we found a way to satisfy him, to treat the cancer and to get him on with his life and on with his loved ones, and on with his family
and his issues. This is what we do every day. And I can tell you that he's very grateful, and he's here lovingly seeking attention and care and receiving that care. This is what we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. And I we talk about a gentleman came years ago with prostate cancer. He had a staht see prostate cancer. He had a Gleason seven PSA twenty one.
So Gleason is how the cancer looks under the microscope. Gleason score goes from two to ten Gleason. Doctor Gleason understood that some men had low risk cancer's low likelihood of spreading, and some men had high risk of spreading. And he made a score range from two to ten. Everything more than six is more aggressive. He had a gleas in seven cancer and his PSA was twenty one years ago. He's a black man, and I said, because in the black community, one in six black men get prostate cancer. One in
twenty three die of prostate cancer. And he has a family history of prostate cancer too, which he has a high Gleason score, high PSA family history. Was one of the big hospitals in New York City. He had a biops of years ago. It came to me years ago and I examined him. It at a large prostate and he wanted to be treated with no cutting and no bleeding. He understood with surgery robotic surgery or open surgery or standard radiation. Success was poor for a PSA twenty one glease and seven cancer.
He came here with outpatient therapy focused on the prostate and now five years later, his PSA is zero. His sex life works, his urinary life works, and despite having a family history and a high PSA and a high gleas and score when he came five years ago, he's now in remission with our treatment only he's fully intact doing what he wants to do. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, in the heart of New York City. I was like a man
who came from Greece. He's sixty four years old. He's married, he has a loving wife and sister, has one child. And he was diagnosed to his stage four colon cancer about four years ago. And again he never had colon oscopy at that time. He was sixty and I urge you and your loved ones, if you haven't had colonoscopy, please get colonoscopy. It's nothing to be ashamed of. I had colonoscopy. He was one of the happiest days of my life to know that my intestines were fine and there was
no cancer, no tumor. I was very happy about that. And of course I will repeat it on a regular basis, and you should too. This man did not do that, even though every day I talk about colonoscopies and you should get that and other tests. If you come here, I'll help you get a colonoscopy if you need, by one of the top doctors in New York. Anyway, he didn't get conoscopy. He had bleeding, he had pain, and he had a colon cancer that spread to the liver
when he was diagnosed, so he had no heads up. Cancer spread to the liver. It was stage four when he was diagnosed. He went to the one of the super pooper hospitals. All the hospitals, I should tell you, I think they're super pooper. He went and he had surgery and his colon surgeon, his liver ablation on the liver. He had years of chemo therapy and nothing worked. And we know that chemo doesn't cure stage four colon cancer. You could say, well, why do so many people get
it? Well, if you knew it cost one hundred or two hundred thousand dollars a year, that might explain some of it. So it had colonoscopy only when he had the cancer. He had the cancer traveled to the liver, He had resection, He had years of chemo therapy, was repeated again and again, and the cancer keeps on growing and he just does not want to have more chemo. He's fed up with it. His bone marrow has kind of been burned out by the chemo. His play the count is only
fifty thousand normals about two three hundred thousand. So the bone marrow has been harmed by the chemo. His red blood count is also harmed. He's anemic and his white blood count is low, all from so much chemo that it hurt the bone marrow. The bone marrow is where is really the factory for the blood cells. So he went to one of the super poopers hospitals.
I examined him. He had this colon cancer with cancer, trouble to deliver and lung and his function is good and he wants to live and he understands it is the likelihood that people having radiosurgery live longer than those who don't. And that's why he came here, and that's why he's here. And we're treating his cancer and deliver and he's had his treatments and he's tolerant and well. And unlike chemo and surgery, with us, we a mold of the
body, We computerize the body. It's all in a stereotactic frame. To the best of my knowledge, we're the only ones with real radiosurgery, with a real radio surgery frame, a stereotactic frame. This is the work we do. First in New York, first in America, first in the Western Hemisphere, with the largest experience focusing on the cancer. Prior to this, in most places treat healthy tissues. That limits the effectiveness of the treatment.
It can cause more harm to the healthy tissues, and it's unnecessary. In general, it's not what we do. We focus on the cancer. We hit the cancer with just fewer treatments and more success, and we have lots of information to send you. You're welcome to calls at two and two choices to get that information. You can call now or later or whenever. This is the work we do. He's tolering his treatment perfectly. He's had no side effects. He comes in with his wife, he lays down and make
them mold of the body. We computerize the body, we send in the beams, and a few minutes later he goes home. He does his work, he goes home for lunch, He goes home to be with his family, go to the movies. He can do what he wants, which is so different than a life of endless chemo or radical surgery. It's so different. It's why so many people come to radio surgery in New York thirteen eighty four, Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, in the heart of New York
City, where we accept most insurance, Medicare, Medicaid. Name's 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 Liederman'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 one two choices two
one two choices about breast cancer treatment. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted for a fresh second opinion, called doctor Leederman breast cancer treatment. Called two two choices two and two choices, called doctor Leederman today two and two choices. It's doctor Leederman with Calvin West singing and writing about his cancer treatment. I had cancer and my home was upside at the radio, Sarge, you read my choices. I'm so glad that may do you want to thank Leader
for me? And you Eli get your catser it's not counting? Oh what two? Three? Well? Sure? No more? Pay is reading your dad? Is such a free or cancer treatment? Called doctor Leaderman two and two choices, two and two choices, Call doctor Liederman. Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the 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 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 Leiderman, we're back. Well, are back, and I have something special to tell you, and that is
that we're live and you can call in. Many people say, doctor Liederman, why don't you talk about Xyz. Well, this is your chance to ask you a question about Xyz as long as XYZ's talking about cancer. So you can call us directly at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. This is the phone number to the radio show during the hour, only one eight hundred three to one zero seven ten. During the radio show this hour only one eight hundred three to one zero seven ten. Noah will pick
up your call. Noah, We'll put you on the line and you'll be on the radio and you can ask your questions. So please do that, and you can call from now till six. We're live from now till six and then overnight we'll be back from midnight to four thirty am. And then tomorrow we'll be back on WR from eleven am to noon and then from one until two and three until four pm in the afternoon. So tomorrow we'll be
back on learning together and answering questions from eleven am to noon. From one to two and three to four tomorrow and then every night at midnight, and lots of people like to go to sleep with doctor Liederman. Many people like to wake up with doctor Liderman. Many people like to work with doctor Liderman every night at midnight. So there's lots to talk about every night at midnight
as well. Why to learn to get better health? So okays, God forbid you or your loved one or your neighbor have a tumor or cancer. You need help, you know where to turn. So my name is doctor Liederman, and you're welcome to tune in or come into our office thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. And I want to tell you who I am. Because there's so many people on the radio and so many people talking, and so many people not really
telling you who they are, what their experience is. I want to talk about who at least I am. My My name is doctor Gil Liederman. I was born and raised in WATERLOOIO. I went to public school, University MD real doctor, real medical doctor at age twenty five, like my brother Ted, doctor Ted Liederman MD at twenty five and doctor Ariel Leaderman MDA twenty five. Aril Leaderman is my son. He's fantastic. He's MD at twenty
five and he went on to the most illustrious schools and the university. He's in America and studied and trained as a board certified cancer doctor, board certified radiation doctor here at thirteen eighty four Broadway, and patients are lucky to get doctor Ario Leaderman to be their doctor. Patients love him, their families love him, the staff love him because he's conscientious and thorough and cares about his
patients and does the right thing. So you're lucky to get doctor Ario Leaderman, board certified, real doctor MD to take care of you, not a student or something else. You get a real doctor here, which is so different than most places. You get a real MD, board certified. And I always want to tell you about myself. After MD twenty five and went onto the University of Chicago, Michael Reese trained for three years internal medicine,
board certified, took care of thousands of people with medical conditions. Then went to Harvard Medical School, trained at the prestigious Dana far Harbor for years, board certified and chemo treated patients with chemo and other treatments for years and stayed on the staff at Harvard Medical School and then went onto the prestigious Joint Center
for Edition Therapy at Harvard Medical School three years Board certified. Here for you, the only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation doctor in New York and one of the few in the world. Here for you if you wish so you know a little bit about me. If you want more information, call us at two one two choices, two one two choices. We'll send you a package of information DVD. Many many people come into our office in our neighborhood.
There's Grand Central Station, Penn Station, Port Authority, Macy's, Times Square, Harold Square, Brian Park. There's a half a million people that come into our neighborhood every day day. Maybe you do, and you're welcome to come into our office and pick up information for yourself and your loved ones. Many people do. I encourage you to get information. We have lots of information. Most people that we meet get a package of information and read
it. And I believe we're about the only one who gives information, detailed information, including DVDs about our work in comparison studies. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty for Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. I want about a seventy seven year old woman who came. She's divorced, she has two children. She came with her son. She was barely able to walk in. She walked in with a
walker. She had this ovarian cancer diagnosed about four years ago. She had abdomino bloating. She had surgery at one of the super big hospitals in New Jersey. She had a colostomy, and then she had chemo, and she had chemo for about four years and it just did not work. Her CAA one twenty five, which is a cancer marker, has been rising, rising,
rising rising. She was seen by one cancer doctor and then another cancer doctor and she transferred away from one cancer doctor because she didn't like him and she felt he didn't take care of her. And then started more chemo pills and she said she felt ignored. She repeated the chemo and she had anaphylactic shock to carbo platinum. She was in the hospital and she has little eating. She was on a liquid diet. She was told she had a bow
obstruction. She needed emergency surgery, and well, she came to me, she checked out of the hospital. She checked out of the hospital, she was told she needed emergency surgery. She came here. We staged her up, We found the cancer. We found that there was not an obstruction of her bowels, but there was big masses of cancer as a mess about ten centimeters in her pelvis. And well, we talked about all the options. We talk and we always talk about all the options, but she just did
not want surgery or chemo. She'd had surgery and that's chemo, and it just didn't work. We started a course of focused being radio surgery to this big massive cancer in her pelvis. Remember she had ovarying cancer. With this big mass elsewhere. They wanted to do colostomy and more chemo. It wasn't working. She came here and within days she was in a wheelchair when she started the treatment. Within days she's walking on her own and carrying on her
own. It's really dramatic, and we expect this mass to shrink. It's highly likely that wild shrink and highly likely that would stay shrunken. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway, even for this woman who's seventy seven and walked out of a hospital. She just told she needed an emergency surgery and chemo. She didn't want surgery. She refused chemo, she refused surgery. She walked out. She came to a
radio surgery in New York thirteen eighty for Broadway. She was evaluated. We staged up. We've got new studies and we're treating this big mass and the colon in the palvis. This is the work we do from ovarian cancer. And we'll talk about a sixty five year old man from Haiti. He's divorced, he has five children, he has diabetes, he has high blood pressure. He was found a PSA of seven. He had a biopsy done and the biopsy showed a gleas In eight cancer almost five years ago, so a
very advanced cancer. He was waking up twice a night to year and eight. We gave a medicine to help him. His weight was one seventy five as as five foot eight. He never smoked. I examined him. He had a very large nodular prostate and we treated him almost five years ago for his Stage T two B nodular Gleason eight cancer. He was treated only with our treatment and now his PSA is zero. He's cancer free only with our
treatment. And he knows with radical robotic surgery for gleasonate, the vast majority of men have recurrence of their cancer, same with standard radiation. He came here for innovative treatment nearly five years ago and his cancer free PSA zero on our treatment only. He treated five years ago. He's had no further treatment. That was the only treatment, and he's remained in remission doing great for all these years, and most probably he'll be great for the rest of his
life. And we'll tell you over the years, we'll come back and talk to you about him. So he's very happy. As sex life works, as urinary life works. He carry on all his normal family activities and personal activities and work activities and caring for his loved ones. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway, and we talk about a
man. He's fifty nine years old. He's a high flying financial man, Wall Street man, and he's from Northern Hemisphere, Eastern Hemisphere, Northern European and he has a fair complexion and he's out active. He's a sportsman and family man and businessman, and he's had skin cancers on his face and elsewhere,
and he has this huge mass on his scalp. And he saw a dermatologist and this dermatologist wanted to do radical surgery on his scalp, cut out his scalp, put a flap from his buttocks or something on his scalp, and he just did not want that. He's fair, complexted, he's blue eyed. He had multiple skin cancers on his hand, chest, thighs, and it was all true with surgery. And he was treated with a reception of his nose, with a flap on his forehead, and he was just
fed up with radical and deforming surgery. And this mass was a big mass on his scalp that was very very very thick. So we saw him, we offered treatment to him, and I can tell you he was treated to this thick skin cancer on his scalp. And now he is cancer free. And he's about the happiest man in the world. Well probably everyone. Intermission is about the happy. He seems even happier. He said he saw his friend. He had a friend. He has a lot of friends who have
similar backgrounds. Had one friend who had a mask cut off from his scalp, and he took a flat from his bottos and the wound isn't healing, it's infected, it's a mass, it's possey, it's red, and the wound is broken down. He went to see his barber. Barber said, wow, what happened to the big mass on your scalp? He said, well, I went to see doctor Liederman. The barber said, give me
his card. I want to send him patience. The barber couldn't believe the disappearance of the cancer with our treatment, non invasive, no mos, no cutting, no surgery, skin cancer treatment for basal cells and squamous cells and can thomas and other skin cancers. This is the work we do. We've treated thousands of skin cancers. We have a whole team together. We have a book that to send you if you want. This man, fifty nine year old financial man, is so happy, so so happy. He came
here after being seen elsewhere with lousy success and lousy treatment. Here is non invasive with this big mask on. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. We have a booklet about skin cancers. We have a book about most cancers. Just call us or come in two and two choices. It's always best to meet in person. Doctors and patients have known that for hundreds of years. If you want a disappointment, phone in, Zoom leads to gloom. If you want to get the real facts,
make a date. Come in. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. If you want min dam, doctor Liederman 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 function, four maintaining urinary control. Call my doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices to consider his prostate cancer treatment for you.
Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth, call two on two choices for prostate cancer treatment. Called doctor Liederman two on 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 bow obstruction, secret turned disaster.
Sadly believed is zurologists. Like many with prostate cancer, radical prostate surgery has many complications, leakage, impotence, shortening, inferior results, death. Thousands come to doctor Liederman to learn all prostate cancer options from New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified Radiation oncologist. Defense Chief sadly believed Pie and Sky promises. Another reason to meet doctor Liederman about highly effective prostate cancer treatment avoiding
radical surgery. Best is to meet doctor Liederman. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices. Thirteen eighty four Broadway had thirty eight. Most insurances Medicare Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices thirteen eighty four Broadway had thirty eight. 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 Radio Surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman the leading cancer expert treat 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. I'll talk with a man. He came from Jamaica, and there's many many Jamaicans and Caribbeans with prostate and breast cancer. He's a sixty six year old man. He has four children. He's born in Jamaica. He worked in a hospital, one of the biggest hospitals in New York and he had a high PSA. PSA was eight. He had a biapse. He was a glee in nine cancer, which is one of the most aggressive cancers and we got all
his records. You're seen by eurologists, You're all just wanted to do a surgery on him. He knew his surgery for Gleason nine most likely the cancer would come back, about eighty percent chance the cancer would come back. So why would the surgeon want to do surgery and a gleas of nine cancer knowing most likely the cancer would come back, most likely the man would lose his sexual life and urinary control and leak urine and not have erections, and not
be intimate and have shortening of the penis. Why would a surgeon eurologists want to do radical surgery. Why, well, you can guess why. I examined him. He had enlarged prostate, he had a Gleason nine cancer, and we talked about all the options six years ago. Six years ago he came and had all the negative features as a black man, which has higher risks. We know one in six black men get prostate cancer. We know one in twenty three men brought Black men die of prostate cancer, and he
had a very high risk cancer. Five years ago he was treated here with non invasive treatment all or treatment, outpatient therapy treated and now five six years later his PSA is zero. So he had a high risk cancer, now zero in remission with our treatment only, no radical surgery, no chemotherapy. This is the work we do. His PSA is now zero, fully intact, enjoying his life, happy that he came here to radiosurgery. Thirteen eighty
four Broadway. What about a woman who came ten years ago? Exactly ten years ago. She's sixty years old, She was divorced, had one son, shed lepel sarcoma of her left thigh, shed a mass. It was five inches in size. She had biopsy showed lepel sarcoma. She had radical surgery at one of the big hospitals in the five boroughs. They were moved a ten and a half by none by six centimeter Lpel sarcoma number for cancer. If you're gonna cut, they have to get out the cancer out.
But the margins, they sad to say, were two closed. They didn't remove enough of the cancer. She had standard radiation. She was weak, she had pain, She had pain going into the hip and knee. She had difficulty moving. She was seen by one orthopedic surgeon, another and another and another, and she was just so upset. She was so upset that she had the surgery. She had standard radiation elsewhere, nothing worked. She was getting worse and worse and worse. She came here ten years ago and
we staged her up. We found that the cancer had recurred right in her bodocks, right in her hip, and well we did a biopsy of that. It was cancer, the same LPEL sarcoma that the surgeon left behind. And so often the surgeon leaves LIGHTPPEL sarcoma and sarcoma behind. So often surgery and standard radiation fail in comparison to so often with radiosurgery, success is high
for treatment of sarcomas. And now it's ten years later, and she just came in this past week and to speak, mass in the thigh still successfully treated. With surgery, the cancer came back nearly immediately. With standard radiation, the cancer came back nearly immediately ten years later, which is a few focused beam treatments radiosurgery, the cancer's been controlled, no evidence of cancer ten years later. And this is the work we do. And I can tell
you something. Being the pioneer of radio surgery, so many doctors and hospitals denounced me of being a Charlatan that radio surgery is nothing. When they were doing surgery like this woman had, they were doing standard radiation like this woman had, nothing worse. With our treatment, we have a ninety percent success rate for sarcomas. Her treatment has been one hundred percent successful. There's been no recurrence where we aimed the beam. This is the work we do.
Makes you wonder why the first doctor was doctor Liederman, or maybe not, Maybe there is no wonder. Maybe you understand. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway, first in the Western Hemisphere, first in America, first in New York, first for you, if you want. Now we're talking about a woman who's fifty one years old. She was born in India. Her husband works at one of the biggest hospitals in New York City. This woman had a neuroendercin cancer of the liver. She
was seen. Remember her husband's a big shot in the hospital, and he took her to another big shot chemo doctor for a neuroendercan cancer of the liver. And she had chemo for twelve months with this doctor at this super duper place. She had monthly shots, she had pills, she had and the cancers grew, and then the cancers traveled to the ovary, but she wasn't told that. She was only told that the ovaries were inflamed. They cut out both ovaries, both ovaries one was the size of a melon, was
filled with cancer. The other one side of the tomato, filled with cancer, and she was only told it was inflamed. She didn't know the truth until she came to Radio Search in New York. She came with terrible pain in her arm. The cancer traveled to her humors or left humors. She was barely able to move. She was suffering. She was in pain for months. She told her doctors. Her doctors ignored her. They ignored her.
She wasn't even seeing the doctor all the time. She was seeing a nurse and a nurse practitioner and a PA, and all of them told her, don't worry, nothing's going on. We'll give you more chemo. The chemo wasn't working. The cancer spread of the ovaries, it's spread of the bones, it's spread of the lung, it's bread to the liver. And they kept on giving her a chemo twenty thousand dollars a month. It wasn't working. She came here the same day. We've got tests, We've got
an MRI, we analyzed the bone. The bone was ready to break. She was offered surgery if she wanted. She didn't want. She wanted radiosurgery, non invasive treatment for this cancer. And just in a few treatments, the pain is gone. She's getting better. The pain that she was suffering for so long months with pain in her left humors from a neuroendocrine cancer is
gone. And this is the work that we do every day. We see so often primary cancers, cancers where they started, and metastatic cancers where they traveled. We could have easily treated the cancers and the ovary. Yet the surgeon told her it was inflamed. It wasn't cancer. They didn't tell her the truth. Even to this day, until she came here, she never knew her ovaries were filled with cancer. Despite the fact her husband worked at
the big hospital. She was misled. She was given chemo that didn't work. It was useless, it was expensive, it was toxic. She never got better until reaching thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, and the same day we're able to start her treatment, diagnose her treat and get her better. And I'm doctor Liederman. Thirteen eighty four Broadway. Call us at two and two choices, two and two choices. Thank you and God
bless you. This is doctor Liederman. Thanks for tuning in to the Radio Surgery Hour with Doctor Gil Leiderman and myself. If you have questions before next week's show or want a free informative booklet and DVD, just contact doctor Liederman at two on two choices. That's two one two two four six four 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 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 booklet DVD two super Convenient Broadway in thirty eighth in Manhattan, meet doctor Leiderman 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? Conductor, they don't mean today to want to choices A much bad way too? Want two choices, Conductor THEA 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 the don't mean today to want you choices A much bad way too? Wanttowo choices, Conductor LEA don't mean today, Doctor Leiderman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four,
Broadway. The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed
