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5PM Dr. Lederman Discusses Various Treatments for Cancer

Jul 21, 202457 min
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The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed for cancer treatment. Most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York, First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liederman hits your

cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers from head to toe cancer treatment with possibly a second chance for you even if chemo radiation or surgery didn't work or isn't tolerated. Goals are your best results and quality of life. Meet doctor 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. 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 four Broadway and thirty eight. Catch aplane, 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 hospitals. Day made me very happy. Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight. If the address my cancer had been set straight? Called to on two choices for an Appointment's mate the

toleeder Men's top rights. For more information about innovative cancer treatment, called doctor Leaderman 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, thank you, no, and thank

you for tuning in today and every day. We're on the radio every day. Why to learn, to educate, to be smarter, to get better care for ourselves and our loved ones and her friends and even the person down the street who we know is suffering and you don't know what to do, how to help, And then you learn, You learn the day after day about our special work. You learn about patients have gone elsewhere, even super places, without benefiting, and then they come here and wow, it's such

a difference. It's such a change for most people, not everybody, but for most people. 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. I'll talk about a woman who came to me just a few days ago. She's seventy nine years old, she's married, she has two daughters. She had ovarian cancer. She was diagnosed a year ago. She went to a local hospital and then to another hospital, and then she went to

super duper General Hospital for advanced ovarian cancer and she had chemotherapy. She had a year of chemotherapy for her cancer, and her cancer kept on getting worse and worse and worse in her doctor who's never told her what to do. And then finally, after a year, she had an ostomey place was cancer raptor on the bowl. She couldn't move her bowels, she had a colostomy, and well, she had more and more cancer, more and more pain.

She hadn't scans every couple of weeks, and the treatment wasn't working. And this is what happens actually to most people who have chemotherapy for advanced cancer. It may work for a while, it may work at the beginning, and then the cancer mutates, the cancer changes. So cancer is not like a table or a chair or bed, or a mirror or a clock. A cancer is a dynamic process and often once you give it chemotherapy, once it receives chemotherapy, you may not be giving it, but you may be

allowing it, or you may know about it. The cancer actually tries to fight back and fights back by mutating, by changing, And that's what happened in this woman who had an advanced cancer went to a super duper general hospital. And was so interesting about this woman Number one. She's a very nice woman and a very nice husband and loving husband. And she has a daughter who's on the staff at one of the biggest super duper hospitals in New York

City. And while the while the patient's daughter did not come here, she was on the phone all the time, so she knew what was going on. But I insisted on learning about the details of the case myself. The family wanted to say, well, just listen to my daughter. She's at x y Z hospital, and I said, no, no, let me look through the documents myself. Let me understand what's going on, and let

me examine the patient. And that's what's always best, is to examine the patient and to look through the documents and look at the scans, look at the blood tests, and look at the path report, and look at all the documents and see what needs to be done or what could be done to

try to get her better. And that's why I should tell you parenthetically, why we insist on seeing patients here while we don't do tally zoom boom gloom calls on patients with cancer Because doctors and patients have known for a hundred years, really probably thousands of years, it's always best to meet in person. So the family and the daughter kept on one and meet and just listen to

the daughter she knows everything, but in fact she didn't know everything. And even though she's at a super duper General, she's on the staff of super duper General, and she took her own mother to super duper General, and she allowed doctors at super duper General to give her mother chemotherapy for her cancer for one year. They never got a pet scan, they never adequately staged

her up. And then when their treatment failed, remember the daughter sent the mother to her own hospital, super duper super famous place where she's on the staff. It didn't help. The treatment failed number one. So the key points are the treatment failed, she didn't get proper imaging in my view, and then she was never told about all the options, so a lot of

booboos there. In my view, I believe the doctor should get examine the patient, get prepper imaging, get prepper blood tests and then explain all the options, even the options that don't benefit the doctor. We're here to benefit the patient. Why do we go to medical school. We went to medical school to help the patient, not to help ourselves. So it was very simple matter, why are we helping the patient? Because that's why we're doctors,

to help the patient. It's not to benefit the doctor or the hospital or the chemotherapy industry. It's to help the patient. And so after a year of useless, expensive chemo, remember chemotherapy, the kind of chemotherapy she was getting cost about two hundred thousand dollars at least at the hospital she was at. It's probably even more because they get paid even more. And it didn't work. She had a year of chemo. It didn't work with super

toxic. She came to me weak but fully functional, weak but fully functional with chemo not working. And even though her daughter was a big shot in the super duper hospital, that didn't help her either. And so she came to us and the examinter examiner records and her scans and reports, and I asked for just one test. I wanted to get a pet scan. It had never been done. I wanted to stage her up. I saw her on Thursday, and then on Friday, we got a PET scan immediately.

And then the PET scan only showed the cancer and the abdomen, and she had a mass. It was twelve centimeters in the abdomen, a huge mass which was causing her pain and suffering, interfering with her with her function. But the scan also showed a mass in the brain, and so we got immediately a brain MRI which showed actually five metastasys to the brain from her ovarian cancer. The doctors of XYZ super Duper General never got a scan of the

brain at this time, They never got a PET scan. They sent her home actually to die. And that's where she came to me, from going home to die, and we put together a program for her to be able to treat the cancer in the brain, the cancer and the pelvis all non

invasively, with no cutting and no bleeding. Wow, what a difference it made that she came from Super Duper General where her daughter's on the staff, and she obviously thought super Duper General is the world's greatest place to come to Radio Stirt in New York, where she got information information about her mother's scans about her mother that had never been done before, that showed the extent of the cancer, and then treatment options that the doctors at super Duper General never

told the patient, never told the patient's husband, and never even told the patient's daughter, who's on the staff at super Duper General, exist until she came to Radio Stirt in New York. And that's why people come here from

her own the world. Even if you're on the staff. Even if you're on the staff at super Duper General and you're getting treatment, you think it's so fantastic, you still probably have a lot to learn by coming to Radiosurgery, New York, thirteen eighty four Broadway in thirty eighth Street, and we immediately put together a plan to treat this woman's cancer in the brain, which she knew nothing about, to treat the cancer in the pelvis, all non

invasively with high success. And there's a huge difference between the care she got here and the care at Super Duper General Number one, number two. There's a huge difference in giving chemotherapy that maybe it works for a few weeks or months and then the cancer always grows back, versus with us, there's a ninety percent chance where we attack the cancer that the cancer will never grow back.

What would you want a treatment that's non invasive, pinpoint to the cancer, non invasive, no cutting, no bleeding, no injections, with a ninety percent success where we attack the cancer, or chemotherapy that goes all over the body with a lot of toxicity, as you know, with the cancer

always growing back. So the options are clear. Even if your daughter works at XYG General, even if you think it's the best, you may wish to come to Radio sit in New York and have a new perspective from a new doctor, New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation doctor, Doctor Liederman, thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, in the heart of New York City. It's easy to get to us. You can call

us even now or whenever you want. Two and two Choices. We have a package of general information about innovative care available to you. We'll set it out at no charge. You can check our website which is r SNY dot org. RSNY dot org. You can call us two and two Choices, two and two Choices and Digits is two and two two four six forty two

thirty seven, two and two two four six forty two thirty seven. Even if you think you have a special connection to super duper hospital and super duper hospital disappoint, Like so many, you may wish to get a fresh second opinion here and consider treatment if you wish. Where forty thousand patients have been treated over decades with high success, non invasive, no cutting, no bleeding.

This is the work we do, the pioneer, the first with radio surgery in the Western Hemisphere, the first with radio surgery in America, and

of course the first with radio surgery in New York. And patients always know it's best to go to the doctor with the most experience, who's reliable, and who's had this innovative care available for good reason, because so many people like this woman have had chemo that just doesn't work, isn't wanted, doesn't help, is expensive and yet toxic and really useless as far as providing durable benefits. My name is doctor Liederman, thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty

eighth Street in the heart of New York City. Accepting most insuredurances Medicare, Medicaid. 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 to fail to pass,

we may be able to offer you new cancer treatment options. We treat new and recurrent cancers, small or large, most anywhere in the body, even if prior chemo, radiation or surgery didn't work. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices for a free booklet DVD thirty eighth and Broadway. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted, Harvard trained, Triple Board certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices for innovative cancer

treatment. Best is to meet doctor Liederman in person. All two and two choices, two and two choices. Radical surgeries deform beautiful bodies. Doctor Liederman treats cancer non invasively. Woman afraid to cancel mystectomy, afraid to offend doctors more than deforming her own body. Woman lust her face, vision, hearing, and smell by doctor. She felt walked on water. Water is gone. Cancer is back. Woman lost her entire arm cancer relapsed with vengeance.

Here for second chance after not wanting to wait minutes to see doctor Liederman, a visit that might have saved her arm and life. Prostate cancer surgery elsewhere deforms, leaks, impairs, shortens. The right moment to meet doctor Liederman for cancer treatment is now. Doctor Leederman might save your life. Doctor Leederman, most experienced body radio surgery, accepts most insurances Medicare, Medicaid. Thirteen

eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth First in America. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices. Call doctor Leiderman two and two choices. Welcome back to the radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the WR studios in the hearts of New York City. Were just a few steps from the radiosurgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, 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. We are back. I want to talk about a gentleman who's sixty seven years old. He's Hispanic born in Dominican Republic. He has one daughter.

He presented with biopsy proven cancer. He has prostate symptoms. He has high blood pressure. He had a biopsy of his prostate ten years ago. He had Gleason six cancer and multiple cores. There were twelve cores. Three of the cores re positive for Gleason six cancer. He said his doctor left town, he lost his insurance, and he came to me about eight years ago. He came with a PSA that was going up. PSA was eight point four three going up. Gleason six cancer. He had a biopsy twice.

He had biopsies actually in Puerto Rico he got sick, and then in New York. He has urination five times a night. He's waking up to urinate five times a night. Wow. And his wage's one ninety. A couple of years before it was one sixty five. He never got any treatment. He says he doesn't know why he gained weight. He has no family history of prostate cancer. A lot of people think, oh, there's no cancer in my family. I'm okay, no. About ninety percent of the time

people with cancer have no family history. In fact, it's normal not to have family history. Just because no one in your family has cancer doesn't mean you're immune, not at all. He was on medicine for his prostate. He was on medicine for his blood pressure. He on exam was alert and oriented. He had no lies involved. He had no pain in his spine. His lungs were clear, his heart was normal, as abdomen was without masses. His prostate was enlarged, and he had this gleas in six cancer.

Three of twelve cores positive. PSA went up to eight point four. He was rising and active. And this is seven years ago, So seven years ago he was treated here. He did not want to have surgery because he understood with surgery open surgery where they opened the man up with the hands and the knife, or robotic with a gizmo. Either way, success is less. Number one. Number two. Most men, ninety seven percent of men will have impaired or no erections. Eighty percent of men will be leaking

yearine after radical or robotic surgery, and it's big surgery. Some people died during the surgery. So there's lots of reasons why men with prostate cancer come here for a fresh second opinion, even though the surgeon may want to do surgery. So what, it's your life and your quality of life and NS. This man had a surgeon, he walked away from the surgeon, came here, and now years later, seven years later, his PSA is zero. He's doing great. His sex life works, his gurinary life is perfect,

his urination is better than ever. This is the work that we do every day. We have lots of information to send you about prostate cancer. Why you might wish to be evaluated. If you don't know what your PSA is and you're a man, hey, it's time to know and it's time to follow. It's very important today. I see so many people. I saw a man this week. He walked to His PSA was fourteen hundred. Normal PSA. PSA is prosthetic specific antigen. His PSA was fourteen hundred.

Has cancer traveled? He never knew about it. So it's really always best in my view, if you care about your life, and you care about your health, and you care about your future, and you care about your body, to get checked up, come in. It's no big deal. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We can if you'd answered quickly about whether it's prostate or breast, or lung or pancreas or bladder, you name it. This is the work that we do at thirteen eighty four Broadway.

So this man sixty seven years old when he came to us, now seventy five seven years later, cancer free. He has an excellent future. He's likely to live many, many more years with a high quality of life. 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. And I'll talk about a woman who comes to us with a very rare tumor. An eighty one year old woman. She's born in New York City.

She has four children. She came with her son. She was fine until a year ago. She went to one of the big hospitals with shortness of breath. She had a big mass in her neck. She never had a biopsy. She never had a biopsy. She saw doctors at the hospital. They did a scan. They want to do radical surgery, remove everything from her jawbone and tongue all the way up to the brain for a paraganglioma tumor. She had a big tumor starting on the blood vessels, on the

coronated blood vessels going to the brain. They were going to do this radical super surgery, and no one told her about of the options. They said, Oh, you got to have this surgery, have this big tumor. We can imagine operating on an eighty one year old woman to operate and remove everything from her mandibo and tod all the way up to the brain, all the way up to the center of her head. Wow. And no one told her about any option until she came here to thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway

in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. Sawt Dofter Liederman. Yes, it's a benign tumor that could be devastating. It's devastating, it's a big tumor. It's palpabo. Surgeons run them do radical surgery which would change your life and her breathing and her appearance, her speech, and her swallowing for the rest of her life, and no one ever told her any options until she came here. And we believe that every patient should know

all the options, whether it's treatment with us or elsewhere. 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. So for this woman, she's chosen our treatment, she's starting our treatment, and we know the success rate is ninety percent. Why because we have the largest experience. We were the first with brain radio surgery in New York. Brain rail surgery is not surgery.

It's pinpoint treatment where we can send invisible beams to attack benign tumors like this paraganglioma, other benign tumors like acoustic neuromas, meningioma's, pituitary tumors, or cancers like leo blastomas and metastasis with high success focused on the tumor, not on the healthy tissues. This is our specialty. Since nineteen eighty six, We've been at this before anyone else in New York, the longest experience, the most experienced. This is the work that we do every day at

thirteen eighty four Broadway, man in doctor Liederman. Yes, we accept most assurances. Yes we will see you if you wish. You can call us even now to get information sent to you about our special cancer and non cancer benign tumor treatment. And we'll talk about a woman. She actually just sent me an email today. This is a woman who came to us five years ago. She's sixty seven years old, lovely woman. She's married, she has a daughter. She came with her husband. She had high blood pressure.

She had a colostomy in the pass which was reversed. She had a knee replacement, and she came to me when her nippo inverted. Wow, so many years ago. Twenty nineteen. She had a mammogram and she had views and she had a biopsy. This is so many years ago. She had invasive cancer along with DCIS. She was seen by her primary doctor and her surgeons and she feels a lump under the breast under the nippo. She had a biopsy which showed invasive cancer grade three with DCIS, DCEs is ductal

cancer inside to and invasive cancer both. She had an ultrasound of mammogram. She had a speculated mass in the breast, and I examined her show sound as a history of skin cancers. So when I examined her, she had a two centimeter mass by the nippo with distortion of the nipple. On the left breast, she had a palpable one centimeter lymph node. And she met with me and she had seen surgeons before, she had seen chemo doctors before, and she just did not want to have surgery in her breast. She

did not want to have surgery on her armpit. She wanted non invasive treatment. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway, thirty eighth Street, in the heart of New York City, and so so many years ago she was treated here, and years later she is cancer free, doing well. Mammograms are negative, ultrasounds are negative, cancer markers are negative, physical exams are negative. Is not negative as her.

She's such a positive, lovely, wonderful woman, cancer free years after radio surgery only for her breast cancer, with no cutting, no bleeding, no surgery, no chemo, no hormones. This is the work we do, and we listen to the patient. We listen to the woman and there's so many women who have breast cancer who just do not want to lose their breast, just don't want to have their breast deformed. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. And one more thing

about this woman. She's fair complexed. I told you before she had skin cancers before she came to us. Well, many people with skin cancers get more skin cancers. And she came to me after we treated her breast, and she was so happy. She said, doctor Liederman, I saw when I was here the information on the walls about your treating skin cancers, and she said, is that right? I said, yes, that's right. And she's had now three skin cancers on her forehead, on her lip,

and on her face, all treated with radio non invasive treatment. After she learned about our treatment for her breast, and nowadays she goes to the dermatologist and gets a biopsy and comes to us and says, doctor Liederman, I have this, can you take care of me? And three out of three times we've treated her. In three out of three times her skin cancers in remission. Her breast is in remission. She said. Four cancers she had

this large invasive cancer the breast treated with radiation only here. She had three skin cancers, one on the forehead, one on the lip, one on the scalp, treated here, all cancer free four of four, which is pretty good, right, four out of four thousand percent, as to say in baseball. And this is the work we do. We treat many breast cancers like hers. We treat many skin cancers, and people come from around

America to have their skin cancer treated. Without cutting her bleeding, you can imagine that skin cancer the lip, where surgery would most likely be deforming. We'd interfere with speech and appearance and eating and drinking. If you can't close your mouth, food will follow your mouth. A big decision on the lip may cause distortion, which most people don't want, and functional problems. She

came here because she liked our treatment. She had proof of the breast and now has three skin cancers, three for three, basal cell and square mis cells, all treated successfully here at Radio Surgery, New York, thirteen eighty four Broadway. We're accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. And one more thing I want to tell you, and that is that we're live on the radio and we're live, meaning you can ask your questions. You don't have to be bastful. We're not going to bug you, we're not going to

send you an advertisement, we're not going to embarrass you. You can call us at one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. On eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. You can call now from now till six o'clock. We're live on the radio one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. Again, the number for the radio is different than our office, so radio is one eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. And ask your question about cancer, cancer issues, the things we talk about on the

radio. Call us now if you want. And I want to introduce myself. As I said earlier, my name is doctor Gil Liederman. I was born and raised in WATERLOOIO. Went to public school, University MD at twenty five, Real medical doctor MD, like my brother Ted, doctor Ted Liederman MD at twenty five, and like my illustrious, wonderful son, doctor Arial Leaderman MD at twenty five. Patients are lucky to have Aril Leaderman. He

trained at the most illustrious places in America, from coast to coast. He's here board certified able willing comprehensive, thoughtful, compulsive, loved by his patients, loved by their families, loved by the staff, to treat your cancer, or your loved ones cancer, or your friends cancer, or the person down the street who's wondering, doesn't know what to do, Maybe stuck at

super Duper General getting a treatment that's not tolerant or not wanted. Might be time to call after our real leaderman if you want two and two choices two

and two two four six forty two thirty seven. I went on after MDA twenty five to University of Chicago trained Internal medicine, Board certified, then after three years, went to Harvard Medical School the prestigious Dana Farber Cancerstitute, trained in medical oncology, treated thousands of patients on the staff, Board certified, and then at the Harvard Medical School Joint Center for Ancient Therapy, the prestigious

Joint Center trained in radiation ecology, the only Harvard trained Triple board certified radiation doctor in New York, one of the few in the world. Here for you, with lots of experience, having treated forty thousand patients over decades. This is the work that we do every day, So for like this woman

who had a breast cancer. Didn't want surgery, didn't want chemo. Now years later cancer free had three separate skin cancers on her scalp, on her forehead, on her lip, did not want any mos or surgery or excavation of her skin. Did not want any more deformity came here. Four cancers treated non invasively. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. We have lots of information to send you. You can

call us if you want, We'll send a package at no charge. Two and two choices is our phone number, two and two choices or indigits. It's two and two two four six forty two thirty seven. Two and two two four six forty two thirty seven. And of course we accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. We'll be right back when doctor Leederman came to New York from Harvard. Ninety seven percent of women in New York we're losing their

breasts as breast cancer treatment. But ninety percent of doctor Leadhaman's patients with breast cat cancer we're keeping their breasts. Doctor Leederman, an outspoken advocate of breast saving therapy, educated women about choices to arm every woman about breast cancer choices. Breast saving whenever possible and desired. When every hospital thought standard radiation was okay, doctor Leederman had a better idea innovative Doctor Leederman first brought brain radio

surgery to New York and body radio surgery to America. Meet doctor Leederman, breast conserving therapy over decades. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Call two on two choices, two 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 on 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 cancer normal subside at the radio surgery choices. I'm so glad we do you wanna thank dot Venom and you Eliot Jr. Katzer. It's my counting one two three, well side No pay is read your brand that is such too free cancer treatment called doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices called 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 Away in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere with body radio

surgery. You can also call doctor Liderman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liderman, we're back. We are back. We have Lisa on the phone. Lisa, how are you hi, Doctor, I'm fine, Thank you. My question is I have an eighty four year old cousin who was diagnosed with biled up cancer about a year ago and the cancer came back. They came back after what treatment did

it come back? But the conventional treatment, you know, the port, the radiation, all of that stuff, and it's now in yes, and it's now in his nodes, okay, And they have given him a prescription another ten weeks, twenty sessions. And I just left the message at your office. So this way they can mail him out a pamphlet because apparently his lady companion whenever I mentioned something is no no no no no no no no,

so she has totally knocked me down. But if I could get him to your office, which that's going to be my goal shortly, how do you deal with this? Well? Number one, I means yeah, number one. Abraham Lincoln, our president in one hundred and fifty years ago, said you could lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink. And when you come into our office, you'll see a sign with a

picture of Abraham Lincoln up on the wall. And lots of people try to help their loved ones, and lots of loved ones are kind of stuck in their way, so they had treatment that failed. Had he come here. The name of this biodoct cancer is actually called a colangio carcinoma klanzo carcinoma, and we treat many many kalandio carcinomas. In fact, when we mail you a package of information, there'll be pictures of colango carcinomas that we treat.

Our successful, it is ninety percent, and it's durable with our treatment. It's durable because we give different doses than most places. Most places give little doses and they don't give the same precision. We're the only ones who use the stereotactic frame, so standard doses don't work very well. Standard treatment doesn't work very well. Chemotherapy doesn't cure anybody with cool anchia carcinoma. So yeah, I have doctors and hospitals love to do it. It's very expensive.

It's great for the hospital and the doctor and the drug industry, but it really doesn't do that much good. So now what you tell me is the cancers travel to the lymphodes, and yes, we do treat col anchia carcinoma

and the lymph nodes and our success is equal, it's ninety percent. As far as talking to someone, you know, many people are setting their ways and even though they've been wherever, they've been at XYZ and they had treatment and the treatment failed, some people just don't understand that there are differences in treatment and just because you have a treatment at XYZ doesn't mean our treatments the same. In fact, I can guarantee you it's not. No one else

uses the same equipment, no one else has the same experience. I've treated forty thousand patients with cancer over the years with high success, ninety percent success. So what can you do to help? Give them the package? And do what you do. But I wouldn't lose sleepover You've done the best you can. A lot of people are said in the ways A lot of people do come after they've been disappointed, or after they feel betrayed by their doctors

or hospitals or drugs or something. So you've done the best you can, and I applaud you for that, and I thank you for that. But again, there's only a limit to what you can do. And I wouldn't worry any more about that. I would take care of yourself. I would get mammograms and colonoscopies and papsmerors and take care of yourself and your loved ones as best as you can. I think that's really the most important thing you

can do. Okay, all right, thank you so much, doctor, Thank you, God bless you, and thank you for your good tidings. And I wish you all the best. I hope you lived to be one hundred and twenty yourself. Knowing me, I will I do massage therapy and I'm into nutrition. So sounds great, sounds great. Wish I had a massage. I wish I had some massage and nutrition right now. Yeah, I'd love a massage and some nutrition right now and probably all the time.

So God bless you. Okay, Well, take care of yourself. And if he wishes to come, he's always welcome. Everyone's welcome to come if they wish. Thank you, God bless you, and thank you. And we have a gentleman on the line. Guy, how are you. I'm quite well. You treated me about I don't know about it. Two years ago, a year and a half co I had some basil cell on in my cheek and a little bit right between my eyes. You might remember me. I shoot archery competitively. Yeah, yeah, the best. You're on

the US. You're on the US archery team. You're like I was for the ninety sixteen. I've been on national team number of years. Yeah, we spoke about archery. We spoke about archery a lot. You taught me a lot about archery. Actually, when we did I had spent a lot of time in the summer's a youth uh life guarding, and then I spent a lot of time competing out on the fields and stuff. So anyway, here I am with my basil cells. I just want to let people know

how it all went. So why don't you tell people what happened? Have you ever had surgery for skin cancers? Not? I my mom did. A buddy of mine went through the pretty much the same thing on his other cheek, pretty much the same time, and I saw pictures of his outcome. Looked like they went out of him with a melon baller to uh to do the mos take out what they thought they needed to take out, and

so them back up me. You know, I kind of think if it was on my chest or on my back shoulder something like that, maybe out have just gone straight for the MOS not knowing, you know, just figure it out, let him cut it out. But this was, you know, on my face. I didn't want it. I didn't want any more scarring. I think I'm kind of handsome. I wanted to keep it that way. So our hats and we're going to Olympics. Last I heard, You're going to the Olympics. So I'm trying again. I'm trying again.

Yet it's not a young guy sport. I still have a lot of a lot of time in me to do this. So tell people I have a question, I have a couple of questions. So usually I usually in America, there's three million skin cancers a year. Ninety nine percent of people or let down the primrose path to have radical mos surgery for their skin cancer. Why are you different than all the other ninety nine percent? When my doctor told me it's basically she called me up after the biopsy. Soon she had

the results, she says, fatal seals. I'm going to schedule you for moos like to talk to the most guy tomorrow. And I went, whoa, whoa, whoa who I've heard you commercials before and you know, like you know, we say this the choices, his options. And I just said right away from you know, hearing the rhetoric that that you report that you you know have well your experience, you know, hey, you don't need to get radical deforming, you know, come and see what we could

do. So I went straight to you and that I have a lot of trust in in what I've seen and what I heard, and well, if we went and the treatments were very simple. I laid there for about forty five seconds a time, a minute of time or so, for a bunch of ten sessions. And I'll let everybody know way through kind of felt like a little bit of a sunburn. My face is fine. My face is absolutely perfect. You can't see any I think the littlest tiny thing you can

see is from the biopsy. But you can see zero remiss. So if I Miss America comes up to right now, what was she think about the results of your skin treatment, she would be able to keep your hands off. Would you see any scar, deformity anything? That? Absolutely absolutely nothing? And there was another small bit right there between my eyes, and there is zero indication it was ever there. It's absolutely perfect. And you know, I don't know that I got the chance to say, hey, thanks,

doctor Deletement. Well tell me in twenty years that you can tell me twenty years. Can you what it's like? Did you have any pain or suffering or anything during the treatment? Not at all? Did did didn't even realize what was going on. I closed my eyes and relaxed for a while. Like I said, the door closed. The machine went on for about a minute, and then he said, we'll see you next time. Did I not at all? No pain at all, not at all, like

I said. About halfway through the I think it was ten treatments. About halfway through, I started noticing a little discoloration. It was like a little bit of a sunburn right now, a little pink just a little pinkness, temporarily go away away, well gone, hold gone. Like like I said, if you look at it now, I would have to explain to you where this spot is because there's nothing visible. Any regrets, no, not at all. You can good, good buddy of mine, his uh,

his nephew was talking basil cells. I said, you gotta get your butt into uh doctor lead him and I gave him all the information your website and all I've mentioned you to quite a number of people now and uh, you know, I say, hey, And and a good friend with his wife with his wife's friend had breast cancer on one side. She had a she had to misteket me on one side, went through a chemo and everything. She now has breast cancer on the other side. And I said, why

are you going to go get the other breast packed off? Now? Like she went through it or you know, you know what it cars try this does It is going to hurt to try. Insurance is going to cover it. You know, it might be the best thing of that happened. So you know, I tell, I tell anybody who's going down the same path.

Just you know, my god, doctor Liedhiman did just the the absolute most perfect thing he could have done for my face, you know with mem Uh you know, I'm a I'm a walking example of how it goes right. And it just went. It was so easy and went completely right. So how could you not show up any regrets, not at all. Any advice for other people with skin cancers. Yeah, absolutely get in to see doctor lead him in. My my goodness, it was Uh it was the

easiest you know, just the easiest process and the best outcome. Like I said, my good buddy. It was almost to the day I told him what I was doing. He was like, I just had it done, and he showed me the pictures of his MOS surgery, you know, and here it is. I don't know for a year and a half, two years out, what does he say when he sees you? What does he say when he sees you versus what he has? What does he say, I poke him in his little lightning bolt looking scar on his cheek, and

I told him you should have done what I did. I point to my spot and he kind of like, you know, nervously lest and he goes, well, it comes up again. That's where I'm going. Yes, that's of course, that's where you should go. All right, Thank you so much, God bless you. I hope you lived at one hundred and twenty and good health and happiness. So beautiful career on my way, and I hope you have a big success at the archery tryouts and the archery competition.

I'm retiring from my career next week, but not from archery, no, no, no no, I'm going I'm going harder and heavier into that. So look for me in twenty twenty eight. All right, God bless you, and thank you you too. Dot say gay bye, thank you, thanks for your kindness. Myn'm doctor Liederman. We'll be right back. Numbers mean much to me because of prostate cancer. I'm Johnny Bragg's the number two for my stepfather who died of prostate cancer and my uncle who suffered so

much after prostate cancer surgery. The number fifteen fifteen years since doctor Liederman's successful treatment of my prostate cancer. The number zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor Liederman's successful prostate cancer treatment. What every man wants? The numbers one, two, three, four important for every man with prostate cancer. One getting the most successful treatment, two avoiding radical robotic surgery, three keeping

sexual function, four maintaining urinary control. Call my doctor Liderman two and two choices, two and two choices to consider his prostate cancer treatment for you most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted thirteen eight tent for Broadway at thirty eighth. Call two and two choices for prostate cancer treatment. Called doctor Leederman two one two choices. I'm glad I did. You'll be number one with doctor Leiderman.

Speedy recovery for Defense chiefs secret prostate cancer surgery on Christmas Eve, not informing even the President returned an ambulance with pain absess bow obstruction, secret turn 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 Liderman 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 at 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 Liederman at the WR studios in the Hearts of New York City, were just a few steps from the Radio Surgery New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treat 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 Liederman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back, We are back. I want to talk about a gentleman's fifty five years old. Came to us with a glease In six cancer PSA five point six y nine.

Came ten years ago. I was born in Jamaica. He's a black man, I said, because in the black community, one in six black men get prostate cancer, one in twenty three diet cancer. Of course, we treat men and women and children of every race and religion and creating color. He came to us he was by upset elsewhere. Of course, the urologist, the eurologists is a surgeon. Surgeon told him he should have surgery,

but he heard us on the radio. Actually a friend, a radio listener told him about our special work, and he just did not want to have surgery. Did not want to lose his sex life. He did not want to lose his urinary control. He knows, with radical robotic surgery, about ninety seven percent of men lose their erections, about eighty percent lose control of their urine. So he had a Gleason six cancer PSA five point sixty

nine. His surgeons scheduled him for surgery, and he walked away. He came here, and he came here ten years ago for prostate cancer evaluation. We staged him up, we got tests to prove his cancer had not traveled. He was treated here and now ten years later, his PSA is zero. His sex life works, his urinary life works. He's fully active. He's happy. He's happy he had the treatment here when sergeants were pushing him to go elsewhere. He's very happy to have this treatment. All unique treatment.

All treatment is not alike. It's so important to understand the differences. We have information to send you, whether it's about prostate cancer, breast cancer, lung or bladder, you name it. We have lots of information and lots of experience, probably more than anywhere else. This is the work that we do every day. And I want talk about a man who's forty eight years old. Just came in on yesterday. Actually he's forty eight, born

in New York City. He was diagnosed, he had a cough, he had a chest X ray, he had a cat scan, he had a biopsy. He went to two of the super poo pooper pooper big hospitals in New York City. He had lung cancer, Squamu's carcinoma. Went to the first hospital, I started a chemo. He went to the second hospital, even bigger and more super pooper ish, and they continued the chemotherapy. Had cancer traveled to the pelvic bones, so he had severe pain and suffering in

the pelvic bones. They gave him their form of radiation. They gave them their form of chemo for one year, so he said one year of chemo, he had radiation. And he came to me. He came to me, he is planning to go on a clinical trial. What is a clinical trial, Well, more or less, it's an experiment. It's kind of like taking the human being as a guinea pig and trying something. And of course the hospitals get paid usually lots of money, fifty hundred thousand dollars.

Doctors too, and the patients giving up their life, they give their life kind of for medical science. And he was scheduled and a lot of people come, oh, I'm so happy I was accepted on a clinical trial, but they don't understand the clinical trials in general are experiments to study certain drugs or treatments that haven't usually been done before, to kind of take a patient's body as a guinea pig, and the patient's excited because they're not really explained

what it is. Well, he had a year of chemo, and he had standard radiation and nothing worked. Nothing worked, And he came to forty eight year old man, strapping, big man, limping, he could barely walk. And well, I saw him. I went through all his paperwork, and he kept his wife on the phone. His wife was on the

phone while we were speaking. And I went through a year of paperwork, a year of imaging, a year of chemo, a year of radiation, and none of the treatment worked at the super pooper, biggest place and around what he thought was the best place around. And I showed him the paperwork, and his doctors never showed him the fact that the cancer never responded to the chemotherapy. In fact, the cancer has been growing. He told me when I first talked to him, I have a neuropathy in my leg.

Well, neuropathy is usually from chemotherapy. Chemotherapy because a lot of neuropathy, which is damage to the nerves. A lot of people get chemo have numbness and pain in their hands and feet, which is a neuropathy. He have been told by his doctors because it's not the usual term that most of us use. He staly had a neuropathy in the leg. Well, usually chemo neuropathy is in both hands or both feet. He had no in the leg. And then they showed him no, he didn't have neuropathy. He had

cancer growing through the pelvic bone. He got radiation at this super place, and he had chemo. A year of chemo. Remember the average chemo's one hundred to two hundred thousand dollars a year. And you could say, well, I'm not paying. My insurance is paying. But in fact, all of us are paying. We're all paying, either comes out of our wages, or we write at a check or some way or other through our taxes. We're all paying. So when you say I'm not paying, yeah,

of course you're paying. That's why insurance health insurance prices have doubled in the last ten years. They've doubled because of things like this useless chemotherapy and useless radiation for this man and all the cancers growing. Another one to a clinical trial to be paid with our tax dollars also, and we know the chance of success of that is very small. It's less than five percent ninety chance

that won't work. And of course they like to test on a forty eight year old man who otherwise in good health, so he should be able to endure experimentation. But who wants experimentation when you can have a treatment that really works, I mean to a high degree, when we treat cancer of the lung or cancer in the bone. He has a squamous Carstonleman the lung. He had chemo didn't work. The cancer is growing. He had chemo to the bone. He had radiation standard relation to the bone. The cancer is

growing. He's in severe pain and suffering, and none of his doctors ever explained to him he said that the cancer is growing. None of them told him that the scan show the cancer is getting worse despite a year of chemotherapy. None of them, he said, told him that he had stage four cancer. None of them ever told him the stage. And there's a new article out that shows that eighty percent of people were getting chemotherapy think they're getting

chemotherapy to cure them, when in fact cure is not possible. That the doctors are out being straight with the patients. The doctors are not telling the patients the facts about the limitations of treatment for most people, not all, but for most people getting chemotherapy. Chemotherapy might work for a few weeks or months, and then the cancer grows back. It always grows back, like

in this man. For most people, and with us, when we do radio surgery, there's a ninety percent chance that the cancer that we treat goes away and stays away for the rest of the life of the patient where we aim the beam. So it's a huge difference with chemo. For stage four cancer in general, the cancer almost always comes back within weeks or months, even if it works. If it doesn't work, it doesn't work. Like in him, it never worked. We went through a year of his paperwork.

The chemo never worked, the pain was getting worse. The doctor had a neuropathy. The doctor never told him the cancer was growing, the cancer is growing in the chest, cancer is growing in the bone. Never offered other options, never told him all the options. The doctor could have said, Hey, I can keep on giving a useless chemo that's not working, it's very expensive, that's toxic, or you can go see doctor Liederman and have a new idea about treatment, new ideas that may well work better.

The doctor never told him that, and I think it's incumbent on the doctor to tell the patient all the options. The doctors should be. That's how I was raised and educated, and that's how I practiced to tell the patient

all the options. And if you come to Radio SIRIT in New York, Doctor Liederman, thirtyty four Broadway, where except most insurances Medicare, Medicaid, you will see information on the walls and now I will be talking about it and the handout in the booklet about all the options local treatment, regional treatment, systemic treatments, all forms of each even combination treatment or no treatment. We talk about all the options to each patient. And that's why patient's appreciate

that's why they learn this man. I spend an hour with him, more than an hour with him and his wife on the phone. He said, I'll think about it, and a few hours later he said, Doctor Liederman, he called me up to doctor Leaderman, you're right, I'm going with you. I'm giving up super duper General. They betrayed me, they didn't give me information, the treatment didn't work. I want your treatment, and this is the work we do. And of course we call the insurance company.

You get approval We're straight and narrow with everybody. This is the work we do. If you want information, call us at two and two choices or come in. You can pick up information in an office at two and two choices or thirty eighty four Broadway. My name is doctor Liederman. God bless you and thank you, and I wish you a long and healthy life. God bless you. Thank you so much. 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 Liderman to hit the cancer. He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist. Call two one, two choices to one two choices to

meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Free booklet DVD two super convenient Broadway in thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman, you hit your cancer. Called two want two choices? Two one two choices? Did you know that you've got choices? That there can be a bad way? Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor? They don't mean today. You want to choices? Is a much bad way

to want two choices? Conductor. They don't mean today. Did you know that you've got choices? That there can be a bad way? Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor, They don't mean today. To want to choices is a much bad way too. Want two choices? Conductor, They don't mean today. Doctor Liederman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four,

Broadway. The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed

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