Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
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
(00:32):
from head to toe. Cancer treatment with possibly a second
chance for you even if chemo radiation or surgery didn't
work or isn't tolerated. Goals are your best results and
quality of life. Meet doctor Liderman to hit the cancer.
He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist.
Call two one two choices two one two choices to
(00:54):
meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare,
Medicaid accepted. Free talko 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.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
It's Doctor Leederman with Carrie Stubbs, who sings and writes
about his cancer treatment.
Speaker 4 (01:14):
Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight. Cataplane hop a train,
don't has a tap? Called to unto choices for an appointment? Mate,
So cancer, candy said straight my cancer. It was twenty
two centimeters. Now I am cancer free. No cutting, no bleeding,
no hospital stay, no chemo therapy. I'm grateful to Doc
(01:37):
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 said straight, called to unto choices for an Appointment's
mate the taleder Men's top rights.
Speaker 3 (01:58):
For more information about innovator, I have cancer treatment, called
Doctor Leiderman two and two choices, two and two choices,
thirteen eighty four Broadway. Most insurance is accepted for newer
recurrent cancers. Call Doctor Leiderman two and two choices.
Speaker 5 (02:19):
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
(02:42):
Studios in the heart of New York City, and now
please welcome doctor Leaderman.
Speaker 6 (02:50):
Thank you Rob, and thank you Noah, and thank you
Joe for making this show go. There was big technical
issues overnight and we are going aoka to bring you
new information. My name's doctor Liederman, cancer doctor, board certified,
actually triple board certified. Don't talk more about my credentials later.
So you know who I am and who's on the
(03:11):
other side of this radio or computer or smartphone. So
why are we on the radio every day? Well, we're
on the radio to educate. So if God forbid you
or your loved one or someone else, someone even down
the street, someone you walk in the restaurant, you hear
them talk about cancer. You might say, hey, I've heard
about new treatment options that may be hidden from you elsewhere.
(03:32):
And I can tell you There'll be examples during the show,
and you'll learn about people going sometimes super duper places
and getting super duper off track. And you'll hear plenty
of examples of that today and actually every day, and
you'll wonder, hey, maybe everyone with cancer should see doctor
Liederman do four committing to any treatment. So I talk
(03:55):
about one person. Her name is Genie, and I say
that because she's actually been on the radio and you'll
hear her talking about her case from time to time,
and she's actually on a video that we've done about
her breast cancer. So it's an intriguing patient as a
woman who had one breast cancer and she went to
a super duper place and she had surgery and chemo
(04:16):
and radiation, and she was really upset. She said they
burnt her breast and she didn't like the results. And
then years later she had a second breast cancer on
the opposite breast, and she was just fed up with hospitals,
fed up with surgery, fed up with chemo, and fed
up with standard type radiation, and she came to me
(04:39):
to check it out and did that she did, and
she came to me. So her history was she had
one breast cancer treat with all the usual chemo, radiation, surgery,
and then she came to me for the opposite breast
and chose to have treatment for the second breast cancer.
(05:00):
And she chose no chemo and no surgery, no cutting,
no hospitals, no anesthesia, only primary radiation here at Radio Surgery,
New York, which is a treatment that I would tell
you most often you will not hear about. Why. Well,
there's lots of reasons why. You can say it's a
conspiracy or sergeants want to cut and chemo. Guys want
(05:21):
to do chemo, and it's only guys. It's women to
men and women. And so she trusted me. She met me,
and she trusted me. Beautiful woman. She's eighty years old
by her driver's license, but she looks like she's fifty five.
Beautiful woman, she rides horses. And she came for a
course of treatment for her second breast cancer after not
(05:43):
wanting chemo, not wanting surgery, not wanting anesthesia, not wanting hospitals,
and we treated her. We treated her many many years
ago to the second breast cancer. And ever since she's
been treated for her second breast cancer, he's been in
remission in that breast. She's been in complete remission with
(06:04):
no cutting, no surgery, no chemo, only our treatment. And
then she decided to go back to the first hospital
where they did the cutting and the bleeding and the chemo.
And she told them what she did here with doctor
Liederman at Radio Start in New York and they started
laughing at her. They said, oh, you'll see, it won't work.
(06:26):
It doesn't work. He's a crazy guy. They said all
those nasty things. And I'm used to nasty words. I
don't really care about it as long as a patient
is doing well. Well, sure enough, she got checked up,
and we check out our patients. And in fact, the
cancer came back in the breast that they treated with
(06:47):
all the surgery and the chemo and the standard radiation.
The cancer came right back in the breast where they
did all the cutting and bleeding in chemo. After they
laughed at her, coming to me, wow, you can say wow,
who laughs? Last last best. And then she came back
(07:08):
to me said, doctor Liederman, you treated my second breast,
but now the cancers come back in my first breast. Well,
they already did the radiation and the chemo and the surgery,
and they want to remove my breast. And they told
me that's the usual treatment. When treatment fails, you have
to remove the breast. And I said, well, that's right.
In big super duper places, that's the usual treatment. And
(07:32):
I said, you're welcome to do that if you want.
And she said, but doctor Liederman, I don't want to
lose my breast. I came to you because I didn't
want cutting, I didn't want bleeding, I didn't want chemo,
and now they want to remove my breast and give
me more chemo. It's exactly what I don't want, she
told me. And I said, well, okay, we do treat
(07:52):
patients a second time and said, wow, I can't believe
it because they told me at XYZ super Duper General
that it's impossible to do. And I said, no, no, no,
if you can do it more precisely and more safely
and the patient understands the issues of the day, it
can be done. And so years ago she had her
(08:14):
third breast treated, her third breast cancer. That is not
a third breast, her third breast cancer. So the first
breast again was true with surgery and cutting and chemo
and anesthesia and radiation at super Duper General. Then she
came to me when she had the opposite breast cancer
and had only non invasive treatment with no chemo, no cutting,
(08:36):
no surgery, no hospitals, and then her cancer came back
in the first breast, where the hospitals laughed at me
and who laughs best laughs last, And so she came
to me and said, doctor Liederman, can you treat my
first breast where that all that usual treatment failed. And
I said, we will try if you wish, if you
(08:57):
don't want chemo and you don't want surgery. Yes, And indeed,
years ago we treated for the third time her breast cancer.
So she said, both breasts treated once with us on
our side and twice on the side where super duper
general failed. And now she is cancer free years later
(09:19):
in both breasts, and she has both breasts and both
breasts look perfectly fine, and she is so happy. And yes,
of course we get physical exams, and we get imaging,
and we get blood tests. And every patient who comes
to your says, doctor Liederman, do you do testing, And
of course we do testing. Act like we're in a mood. No,
we're due testing on every patient, just like anywhere else,
(09:41):
maybe even better than anywhere else, because we often see
most places don't do pet scans, which is often the
most exacting test. Most places often don't do cancer markers
which also gives clue about cancer and cancer recurrence. And yes,
we do it all. And so for this woman, she's
had three breast cancer treatments, once on the side she
(10:02):
came for us originally, and twice on the side where
she went to Super Duper General. Their chemo failed, their
surgery failed, everything failed, their radiation failed, and now she's
in complete remission for both breasts years later. And I
can tell you when she comes in she always has
a glimmer in her eye and a smile, and she's
(10:23):
always so happy. And we also both know, not saying
a word, that Super Duper General treatment failed and they
warned her against coming to me. And the happiest day
I think in her life is when she came to
me and had the second breast cancer treated, and then
she had the first breast retreated years ago. And I
(10:44):
would tell you one more thing about her. She also
is a fair complexed woman. As I said, she's eighty,
but she looks fifty five. She has blue eyes, she's blonde,
and she's had skin cancers and she's had skin cancers
on her neck and on her face. And Super Duper
General wanted to radical most surgery on her skin, and
she just adamant now that she understands how the system works,
(11:07):
so to speak, and how doctor Liederman works, so to speak.
She came to me about her skin cancers and said, hey,
they want to cut out part of my cheek, and
I just don't want part of my cheek removed. I
don't want to be deformed. I don't want to be caught.
I don't want deformity. I don't want patchwork. I don't
want a piece of my dary air patched onto my cheek. No,
(11:28):
I want to look like I look. And as I said,
she looks beautiful. And so we treated the cheek. And
then a year or two later she came back to
me and she had a cancer in the neck. And
often people with skin cancers have multiple skin cancers, not
just one, because often it's from sun exposure, usually below
the age of eighteen. Often kids get the most sun
(11:50):
exposure of the least protection. She said. Multiple skin cancers
treated with US. She said, three breast cancers treated with
US successfully, one treated elsewhere super general with recurrence. So
right now she's in complete remission. She's in remission from
her breast cancer. She gets checked regularly she's in remission
(12:14):
from both skin cancers, and both skin cancers are treated
non invasively. People always ask you, well, how can you
do it? And yes, we have special beams just to
go the thickness of the skin. So we can treat
the skin, whether it's around the eye, nose, cheek, mouth, wherever,
including the hands and the feet, and the trunk, most
(12:34):
anywhere you can imagine. We've treated skin cancers. Why because
so many people, so many people just do not want
to have radical deforming surgery. She did not want to
have radical deforming surgery on her breast, either the right
or left breast, and now her breasts are intact. She
(12:55):
did not want to have radical deforming surgery on her cheek.
Her cheek cancer is gone, and she did not want
to have radical deforming sergey on her neck, and that
cancer's gone to all non invasively, and we have lots
of information. You can call me doctor Liederman. Call her
office Radio stirty in New York day or night at
two and two choices. We're located at thirteen eighty four Broadway.
(13:16):
Many people call us to get information sent and set
it out no charge, including latest information and DVD. You
can also come into her office. A half a million
people are in her neighborhood every day between Times Square
and Harold Square, Penn Station, Port Authority, Bryant Park, or
in Centro and walk in and want information for themselves
(13:37):
and for the loved ones. And often people patients come
in because someone told them, Hey, I was talking about
cancer and someone heard me and they said, hey, you
better go see doctor Liederman if you want a fresh
second opinion, second opinion like you probably haven't heard before.
And I will tell you about ninety percent of the
people that come to us learn things about their body
(13:58):
that they never learned before, or about ninety percent of
people learn things about treatment options that they've never heard before.
So it's so important if you wish, if you have
a cancer or suspected cancer, to give us a call.
It two and two choices. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.
There's three reasons why people come to us. Some people
(14:19):
come because they want to get checked out. Men who
have fear of prostate cancer want to get checked or
women with fear of breast cancer or other cancers, colon cancers, pankers, cancers,
lung cancers, you name it. People come to get checked out.
Category one. People come to get checked out. Category two.
People are recently diagnosed with cancer and they want to
(14:42):
hear all the options, really all the options in a
fair way. Come to us for a fresh second opinion
about options before starting any treatment. And then, of course
the third group, the group that have had treatment elsewhere
and the treatment it just didn't work and want to
(15:02):
come to learn about treatment options. Like this woman Genie,
who was told you can't have radiation again, and we've
proven to her that it's not true. We've proven to
her that you don't need to have surgery or chemo
in her case and many other cases for breast and
other cancers. Many people just do not want to have
radical surgery. Many people just do not want to have chemotherapy,
(15:26):
especially people with recurrent cancer, don't want to have years
and years of chemotherapy when they know the outlook is
so bleak. Here we have high success where we attack
the cancer. This is the work we do every day.
My name is doctor Liederman. You can contact me day
or night at two and two choices two and two
two four six forty two thirty seven. It's always best
(15:48):
to meet in person. We have a cancer question. Doctors
and patients have known for hundreds of years. It's best
to meet in person. On the phone leads to zoom
and gloom can't examine the patient. The back and forth
is not the same. If you have records and patient
is not the same. It's always best to meet in person.
(16:10):
We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. Located at thirteen eighty
four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart
of New York City. My name is doctor Liederman. We'll
be right back.
Speaker 7 (16:19):
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,
(16:42):
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 booklete DVD thirty
eighth and Broadway. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted Harvard trained,
(17:06):
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 and two choices.
Speaker 6 (17:20):
It's doctor Liederman with guy talking about skin cancer treatment options.
Speaker 5 (17:24):
You treated me.
Speaker 8 (17:24):
I had basil cell onto my cheek. A buddy of
mine went through the same thing that looked like they
went out of him with a melon baller. This was
on my face. I don't want any caring. I think
I'm kind of handsome. I wanted to keep it that way.
Speaker 6 (17:34):
So you are hats and we're going to Olympics. Usually
in America there's three million skin cancers a year, and
ninety nine percent of people are let down the primrose
path to have radical mos surgery for their skin cancer.
Why are you different.
Speaker 8 (17:47):
From hearing what you report? You know, hey, you don't
need to get radical deforming. Come and see what we
could do. I have a lot of trust in what
I've seen and what I heard, and the treatments were
very simple.
Speaker 6 (17:56):
If Miss America comes up to right now, what would
you think about the results of your.
Speaker 8 (18:00):
She would be able to keep your hands off. There
is zero indication it was ever there. You know, I
don't know that I got the chance to say, Hey, thanks,
doctor Leidman. I tell anybody who's going down the same path.
Doctor Leederman did the absolute perfect thing. That's what you
should do.
Speaker 6 (18:11):
Any regrets, not at all. Called doctor Liederman at two
and two choices, thirteen and eighty four Broadway. Most insurances, Medicare,
Medicaid accepted.
Speaker 5 (18:20):
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob
Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the WR Studios
in the hearts of New York City. Were just a
few steps from the Radio Surgery in New York Cancer
Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman,
the leading cancer expert treat prostate cancer not invasively. He
was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery,
(18:40):
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 Liderman, we're back.
Speaker 6 (18:53):
We are back and I want to talk about a
man sixty six years old. He's a man born in
New York City, has one Sonny came with a PA
say of seven point eight, has a positive family history.
His father died of prostate cancer at age eighty. He
came to me with a Gleason ten cancer. So in
the old days, when they do biopsies and you probably
(19:15):
have friends, they'll say you, oh, I have cancer. But
Gleeson understood about prostate cancer's different kinds of prostate cancer.
Some cancers are slow growing and some are fast growing.
And Gleeson made a scale from two to ten. Two
is the slowest growing, ten is the fastest growing. Ten
is the most ominous, the most worrisome because treatment usually
(19:40):
fails elsewhere. And he came to me. He was referred
by a urologists as urologist who's big time eurologists in
New York City who hates to do radical surgery in
the prostate. This doctor hates to do radical surgery because
he knows with radical surgery, about ninety seven percent of
men lose their section function, about eighty percent p in
(20:02):
their pants, about substantial share have shortening the penis because
when a certain cuts out the prostate. Inside the prostate
is urethra, the urinary tube where the urine goes from
the bladder out. So most men who know better don't
want to have surgery because they do not want to
become impotent, they don't want to become shortened, they don't
(20:26):
want to be leaking urine, and they don't want the
cancer to come back. But the sad thing to say
is that most people in my view, and I've seen
thousands of men, I've treated nine thousand men with prostate cancer,
probably more than most anywhere else, never told these things.
They're never told they get a slap on the back
everything's going to be okay. Well, a slap on the
(20:47):
back and everything's okay is not enough. And every man
that comes here, hopefully with their loved ones, we go
through the data. I show them the data. I show
them major centers across America versus our results else, and
I can tell you we are, to the best of
my knowledge, the only place to show you the results.
And this man came to me with a gleas in
(21:08):
ten cancer and a positive family history. Now here's another
piece of news that you probably haven't heard before. But
if you have one first degree relative with prostate cancer
like your dad or your brother, for example, the death
rate with traditional therapy is seventy two percent higher. So
(21:29):
if you have a family member with prostate cancer and
you have prostate cancer, your death rate is seventy two
percent higher someone who does not have a family member
with prostate cancer. So this man came with very high
risk glease in ten PSA seven point eight. He had
a large prostate multiple course. His prostate was huge, and
(21:54):
he had the family history, and he was urinating twice
a night. He had some pain in the hip. I've
asked him to get scans, and we routinely get imaging,
including bone scans and MRIs. Also often pet scans are
PSMA tests. His weight was stable. He's one hundred and
fifty five pounds. He's five foot eight. He did have colonoscopy,
(22:16):
and we checked that on every patient. We asked for
a repeat because it was so many years since his kolonoscopy.
His only surgery was apdectary. But his father died of
prostate cancer. His mother died of breast cancer, so a
lot of cancer in his family. I examined to be
a massive and large prostate rock Hard prostate sulcus de
(22:38):
sulcus prostate cancer glease in ten multiple cores positive. We
staged him up. We found no spread of the cancer.
With usual surgery success is only about twenty percent. With us,
the majority of the men that we treat are cancer free,
and he trusted us. He was sent by a zurologist
(22:58):
here because I just hates surgery. He hates the devastation
of what surgery does to men with prostate cancer. And
he knows that our men have a high success rate,
and furthermore, they have a high quality of life in general.
And this man, one thing I didn't tell you is
he was treated five years ago. So five years ago
he came at age sixty six. He's now seventy one,
(23:22):
and now his PSA is zero. He is so happy
because he knows he missed that bullet of cancer when
it was so high. Gleas in ten positive family history
came to us and he's now doing great. He's in
remission with no chemo, no surgery, no cutting, no bleeding,
(23:42):
only with our special prostate cancer treatment, which I'll describe
to you in detail if you wish, when you come
here for consultation. We also have a booklet in DVD
which you'd be happy to send to you about prostate cancer.
You can call office at two and two two four
six four two three seven two and two two four
(24:03):
six four two three seven. My name is doctor Liederman,
and I did say that i'd introduce myself, and I
do that because so many people talk about cancer as
if they know a lot, and my existence being a
doctor for so many decades, often people talk about things
that are not true, like, for example, the woman who
(24:23):
had she was told she had to have radical surgery
on her breast after treatment failed elsewhere, and we proved
that wrong. They were the same woman who's told our
treatment doesn't work. She's in remission. That same woman who
had two skin cancers she was told she had to
have surgery. She'd refused that surgery too. She now has
four cancers, two breast cancers and two skin cancers, all
(24:47):
in remission. So I just want to introduce myself, and
if you wish to come here, we'll show you plenty
of examples who wished to call us to get information
in DVD. We'll be happy to send it to it
no charge or obligation. I get my phone numbers two
and two two four six four two three seven. My
name is doctor Liederman. I want to introduce myself. I
(25:08):
was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa. I went to
public school, University MD, real medical doctor MD. I know
many people go to the doctor. They don't know who's
seeing them. They don't know if it's a doctor or
who's seeing him or a doctor's substitute. So many people
actually don't see doctors anymore. And you might have that experience,
or you may not even know. Sometimes non doctors introduce
(25:28):
themselves as doctors when they're not doctors, whoever they are.
I don't diminish them. I'm just telling you often people
do not see who they think they're seeing. Except here
at Radio City, New York, where you're going to see
a doctor, you're gonna see a real MD, whether it's myself,
Triple Board certified cancer doctor, doctor Ariel Liederman, illustrious doctor
board certified, trained at major centers across America, seeing patients,
(25:53):
seeing patients with cancer newer recurrent cancers. Doctor Ariol Liederman
trained graduate age twenty MD. So there's three doctor leadermans
MD at twenty five, myself MD at twenty five. Doctor
Ted Liederman MD at twenty five. Doctor Ariel Leaderman MD
at twenty five three. Doctor Leaderman is all MD at
twenty five. Ariel trained at Illustrious Centers, graduated from one
(26:16):
of the major medical schools in America, and now is
working here, board certified, seeing patients, loved by the patients,
loved by the staff, loved by the patient's families in general.
So if you're really lucky, you get to see doctor
Ariel Liederman, a wonderful doctor, thoughtful, compulsive caring, which is
very very rare in this day and age. I had
(26:38):
at twenty five. Went on after MD to the University
of Chicago Michael Reese trained in internal medicine, board certified,
trained there for three years, treaded thousands of patients with
medical conditions, then went on to Harvard Medical Schools the
prestigious Dana Farber Cancers too it. Trained at Dana Farber,
treated cancer patients three years, board certified, and then at
(26:59):
Harvard Medical School went on to the Joint Center for
Radiation Therapy, trained for another three years, board certified, treating
thousands of patients with radiation, chemo and other methods of treatment.
And now here in New York for almost forty years,
and I probably have treated you or your friends, or
your neighbors or people you don't even know down the street.
(27:21):
So that's the work that I do, and that's who
I am. And I'm here on the radio every day,
and people tune in because they want to learn about
medical issues, and sometimes there's political medical issues about why
people get the chemo and the surgery and the radiation
and all kinds of things. Sometimes it's useful and sometimes
it's not, and we talk about that. We talk about
(27:42):
all the options, and here we don't hide anything. You'll
see the art of radiosurgery on our walls and our
packages that we send you. You'll see all the options,
whether it's chemo, immuno therapy, hospice, standard radiation, radiosurgery, surgery.
You'll learn about all the options, multiple dowity therapy, even
no therapy. This is the work we do every day
(28:02):
at thirteen eighty four Broadway. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.
We do everything we can to be accessible. We're right
in the heart of New York City. There's fifteen subway
lines that come to us one, two, three, four, five, six,
ACEE and QRBDFM seven S and Q So many buses
come to us and can come from where are out
of state to port authority by bus. There's thousands of
(28:24):
bus every day and there's trains from all the airports,
so it's super easy. We're in the heart of New
York City. I believe we're the closest most central cancer
treatment placed in New York City and we made it
for you. And one more thing I want to tell
you is that we're live on the radio, and being
live that means you any cancer question you have, you're
(28:45):
welcome to call us at one eight hundred three two
one zero seven ten. One eight hundred three two one
zero seven ten. We are live on the radio from
now till noon one eight hundred three two one zero
seven ten, and we're back today from one to two
pm and from three to four pm on WOIR. We're
(29:05):
also every Saturday on from one pm to two, three
to four and five to six pm. Every Saturday afternoon
three big grand shows, and also every night we're on
every night at midnight. We're on every night at midnight.
And many people work with doctor Liederman, many people sleep
with doctor Leaderman. Many people around the world. Listen to
(29:27):
that show. It's one of the most popular shows at
midnight every night at midnight, so there's lots of ways
to listen and learn. Just like a doctor becomes a
doctor going to medical school and learning, you two can
learn a lot by listening to this show every day,
or as much as you wish. My name is doctor Liederman,
Cancer Doctor, thirteen eighty four Broadway. We accept most insurances, Medicare,
(29:51):
Medicaid phone number two and two choices in digits at
numbers two and two, two four, six, forty two thirty seven.
We'll be right b.
Speaker 9 (30:00):
It's Johnny Bragg's talking prostate cancer. Twenty years ago. I
came to doctor Leederman with prostate cancer. It was serious.
My stepfather died days after prostate surgery. My uncle never
recovered from prostate surgery. I came to doctor Leiderman with
prostate cancer and high PSA. Doctor Leederman explained all options,
(30:21):
shared his and comparison results. I trusted doctor Leederman twenty
years ago. Today, I trust doctor Leederman even more. My
prostate cancer is gone, my PSA is zero, my quality
of life is great. You can trust doctor Leederman too,
like me, for over twenty years. Call doctor Leederman for
(30:43):
prostate cancer. Two one two choices. That's two one two choices,
thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Street in Manhattan.
Most insurance, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Leederman two and
two choices.
Speaker 3 (30:59):
It's doctor and with Calvin West singing and writing about
his cancer treatment.
Speaker 10 (31:06):
I had cancer and my home of the subside at
the Radio.
Speaker 6 (31:14):
Surgery read.
Speaker 7 (31:17):
My whole.
Speaker 6 (31:22):
Got cho.
Speaker 4 (31:24):
I'm so glad that we do.
Speaker 10 (31:28):
You wanna thank dot lenham Man photo twice phoned.
Speaker 6 (31:33):
Me and you.
Speaker 4 (31:37):
Heliet your katzer.
Speaker 10 (31:39):
It's my counting on two three.
Speaker 6 (31:42):
Well, Si.
Speaker 10 (31:45):
No mopag is read your granddaddy?
Speaker 3 (31:49):
Such a free, can't you treatment? Called doctor Leederman two
and two choices, two and two choices called doctor Liederman.
Speaker 5 (31:57):
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 in New York Cancer
Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman,
the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively. He
was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery,
(32:17):
and he's the first in America and in the Western
Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor
Liderman at two and two Choices for a free informative
booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back.
Speaker 6 (32:30):
We're back. I want to talk about a man. He's
a churchman. He works in church. He lives actually in
the church. He came with the church people. He's here
in Manhattan, and he was diagnosed when he had abdomino pain.
He had abdomino pain, he had a cat scan. He
had multiple lesions in the liver. He had a cat scan,
he had a pet scan. He had attempted surgery. They
(32:50):
tried to open him up and they found that he
was unresected. But he went to one of the super
duper hospitals. He has stage four cancer. They really knew
he had stage four cancer, had multiple lesions in the liver.
There was no way that in my view, he should
have had surgery because well, he had stage four cancer
and they could not remove all the nodules in the liver.
(33:12):
So they did the surgery and it failed, and he
had trouble convalescing from the surgery. He was losing weight,
he had abdominal pain, he had constipation. And he came
to me after surgery failed at Super Duper General, after
being told you can have chemo, which you could only
(33:33):
slow down the cancer for a few weeks or months,
and he came to me with a gastric cancer spread
to the liver. Stage four biopsy proven unreceptible. They opened
them up and they knew that. They really, in my view,
knew that. There's no way the surgeon didn't know that
because the first thing was done was the cat scam,
(33:53):
which showed multiple tumors in the liver. They knew it
was unreceptible. So why did they do it, Well, you
tell me, guess why the surgeon opened up the patient
who they already knew had multiple legions. Take one guess
and we'll talk about when you come in. So he
came to me. He came with his church people, and
I met him and we staged him up. He had
already had a pet scan, he already had a cat scan,
(34:14):
he already had a biopsies, He had everything done, even
already had surgery that was useless. It probably cost somebody,
probably you and me, fifty thousand dollars and all the
rest of America. And he came and he wanted to
know what his options were. He was adamant. He already
tried surgery. It failed. They wanted to give chemo. He
knew that chemo usually fails, I mean stage four cancer
(34:36):
essentially always fails, with a few minor exceptions. And he
after the informed consent process, he and his church people,
and he came with a whole delegation from his church.
So it was very moving. He came with a whole
delegation from his church. He chose to have radio surgery
for the cancer in the stomach and cancer in the liver,
(34:57):
multiple tumors, and somebody will come to and say, oh
my god, doctor says you can't treat cancer the liver,
or he can't treat multiple spots. This patient, we treated
the cancer and the liver and the stomach simultaneously. He
had metastatic stage four cancer. He was treated some time ago,
and then he came for a follow up and the
doctors he went back to the same old hospitale. All
(35:18):
the cancer's all over the place, and they totally misread
the images we got new images of him. We even
used their images and it showed that his cancer is
incomplete remission. Number one and number two we got old scans.
Then we've got new scans more recently, and he's still
in remission after having radio surgery only for his gastric
(35:41):
cancer that traveled to his liver in multiple spots. So
I can tell you that he's very happy. His church
people is very happy. He continues to work in the
church full time. He's fully active here. He never was
in the hospital, he never had chemo, he never had
surgery and a seizure cutting all non invasive treatment with
(36:02):
invisible beams, something that the chemotherapy that they offered and
pushed on him could never have done. Something that the
surgery they did do to him was useless. They cut
him open, it took him a long time to recuperate,
and it served no purpose. They didn't even remove one
dot of cancer. So what a difference it makes, And
(36:22):
he came here and something else. The doctors over there
that did the surgery and the doctors who were pushing chemo,
they never said, hey, we know that surgery is pretty useless.
We know that chemo only works at best weeks or
months if at all, and the cancer grows back, why
don't you go see doctor Liederman. They never told him
that he and his church people discovered on their own
(36:45):
through a friend, a friend who listens to the radio
like you, and maybe you can pass on the information
to others. Radio listeners save lives, and you have a
chance to save lives by passing on this information. It
is so important. That's why we're here to try to
help people, to help reduce cancer hopefully save lives. Like
(37:08):
that man who had the prostate cancer treated for glease
in ten now years later cancer free. That woman who
had three breast cancers one done super duper failed with surgery,
chemo radiation in two breast cancers in both breasts right
and left now cancer free. So there's a big difference
(37:28):
in where you get treatment, the advice you get, and
the motivation. And always think about the motivation. What is
the motivation of the facility and the doctor. Are they
telling you all the information, they tell you all the options?
Are they talking only about what they do? So this
is the work we do, This is why we're on
the radio. We have lots of information to send you
in call us today, or any day you want, day
(37:50):
or night two and two choices two and two two four, six,
forty two thirty seven. My name is doctor Liederman, and
I want to talk to you about another patient who
came to me. This is a patient who had cancer.
He had a prostate cancer nearly ten years ago, and
(38:13):
he had a high risk prostate cancer. He's born in
New York City. Excuse me, he came on his own.
He had a glease in seven cancer and multiple cores.
Gleasing seven is how the cancer looks on the microscope.
Gleason seven is a more aggressive cancer, and his PSA
was twelve. Remember PSA is that blood test. Normal PSA
(38:34):
is four, And lots of people say they listened to
the show, but they somehow don't hear the message that
PSA more than four is considered abnormal. If you have
a biopsy with PSA four, there's a twenty five percent
chance of having cancer. Even PSA three has about a
twenty percent chance of having cancer. So if someone's telling you, oh,
(38:54):
don't worry about it, you're already too old or too
fat or too skinny, or too tall or too short
or whatever, he may want to come and get a
second opinion. This man came. He came sixty seven years old,
he had no child children, had high blood pressure, he
had prostatism asthma. He's on medication, and he had a
biopsy's showing prostate cancer with multiple cores showing glease in
(39:18):
seven cancer. He had an MRI of the prostate. We
showed PI red five. So there's almost always scales and reasons,
and MRI is usually done for men with prostate cancer.
MRI shows the extent often not always in the prostate
and where the cancer's leaving the prostate are going to
the semino vesicles or going outside the capsule, or even
(39:39):
to the lymphonotes. So he had a PI red five
because of the aggression of the cancer by imaging it.
Had a biopsy a year before. So this is a
perfect instance. He had a biopsy a year before. He
could have said, Hey, I've already had a biopsy. He
wasn't cancer. I don't worry. Well, often there's better biopsies,
and there's different kinds of biopsies. And we often talked
to men about the different kinds of biopsies. And I
(40:02):
often see that men are not informed about the different
kinds of prostate biopsies that are available to them. So
he had one biopsy a year before he came to
me negative and then they had a repeat biopsy positive.
Why because of a better biopsy. There's different kinds of biopsies.
Patient came to me with pain in the penis for
three years. He was waking up to yeurine. He was
(40:25):
on medications for that. He'd lost some weight. He went
from two ten to two five. He's six feet period,
and he had operations. He had two prostate biopsies. He
was circumcised. He was seen at one of the big
hospitals for abdominal pain and I examined him. He had
a large prostate, a large prostate gleas in seven. As
(40:48):
his PSA went all the way up to twelve, went
from four to six to seven to twelve. So the
cancer was progressing. And there's something called PSA velocity, how
fast the PSA has So he had a Gleason seven cancer.
He had a PSA that was changing. He went from
four to six to twelve. So at PSA velocity, PSA
(41:12):
twelve is high. Normal PSA is considered four, but he
can have a cancer even lower than that. And his
memri pyrid five. And furthermore, I should tell you that
he was diagnosed and treated eight years ago, so people
would like to know, Hey, he's your treatment durable. And
I will tell you that in general, our treatment is
(41:33):
very durable. So for this man, he was treated eight
years ago. His PSA is now zero. He's very happy,
he's doing well. His sex life works, his urinary life works.
He got no hormones, no surgery, no cutting. This is
the work we do. It was all out patient therapy.
He walked in the door, he got treatment, walked out
(41:54):
the door, and that was it. He was able to
work and carry on his normal life. Every day of
treatment when we're up in many hours. We're uping from
six thirty in the morning till six at night to
accommodate people. Were located in the heart of New York City,
close to most subways, buses, trains make it easy to commute.
So it's so easy and so accessible. And of course
(42:17):
we take most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. This is the work
we do. So another happy patient doing great after radio surgery.
This is the work we do every day. My name's
doctor Liederman. We'll be right.
Speaker 9 (42:32):
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 Leederman's successful treatment of my prostate cancer. The
number zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor Leederman's
(42:55):
successful prostate cancer treatment. What every man wants The numbers
one two important for every man with prostate cancer. One
getting the most successful treatment, two avoiding radical robotic surgery,
three keeping sexual functions. Four maintain in urinary control. Call
my doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two
(43:16):
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.
Call doctor Liederman two one two choices. I'm glad I did.
You'll be number one with doctor Liderman.
Speaker 3 (43:34):
Speedy recovery for Defense chiefs secret prostate cancer surgery on
Christmas Eve, not informing even the President returned an ambulance
with pain absess bowl obstruction. Secret turned disaster, sadly believed
is urologists. Like many with prostate cancer, radical prostate surgery
has many complications, leakage, impotence, shortening, inferior results, death. Thousands
(43:58):
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,
(44:22):
thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Most insurances Medicare,
Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices thirteen
eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Call doctor Liederman two
on two choices.
Speaker 5 (44:34):
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 non invasively. He
was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery,
(44:54):
and he's the first in America and in the Western
Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also called doctor
Liederman at two and two choices for a free informative
booklet and DVD. Hey doctor Liederman, We're back.
Speaker 6 (45:07):
We're back. I want to talk about a fifty eight
year old woman. She's actually anesthesiologist. She came with a
brain tumor. She came last year with a glioblastoma, which
is one of the worst kinds of brain tumors. She
got confused, she was driving, she got lost. She had
left sided weakness of her face and arm. She went
to the one of the big hospitals. She was found
(45:27):
of a mass in her brain. It was five centimeters.
She had surgery there, was found to have glioblastoma. She
was placed on decadron. She was given Kepra for seizures.
She had headaches and weakness, and she decided to have
a biopsy and surgery. She went elsewhere for surgery. She
(45:49):
went to a second super duper hospital for surgery, and
then she went to a third super duper for radiation
and it didn't work. She had come to us, but
she walked away from us. She didn't want to come
for whatever reason. The commute or so on was too
far for her. And now she's come back. Guess why
she's come back now because all that treatment, it's super
(46:11):
duper general. The biopsy, the surgery, the chemo, the radiation
did not work. And now this Anta caesiologist. So she's
a healthcare professional. She's very smart. It's a right sided tumor,
so her dominant hemisphere is the left side, and it's
still working. She's very articulate, but she has a weakness
on her left side or left face or left arm.
(46:34):
And she comes with her husband, both very articulate. She
was born in Haiti, smart people, and she was told
elsewhere she can't have more radiation and they wanted to
give her treatment. It hasn't worked. Actually, none of the
treatment works. She had timidar should have asted, she had
standard radiations, she had surgery and it did not work.
(46:56):
And now she's losing strength in her right leg. She
just had it scan several weeks ago. She's now losing
more strength than weeks in her right leg. She was
weak on her left side and she's leaking urine. She's
also signed off on a corpus colossum involvements, so further
involvement of the brain just in weeks. So she's deteriorating dramatically.
(47:18):
She came to us. She was told elsewhere, you can't
have repeat radiation. That was the same thing the woman
with three breast cancers was told, you can't have repeat radiation.
We put together a program. We try to put together
a program for salvage treatment, for second line treatment. And
this is the work we do. By the way, we're
the first. I'm the first doctor to perform radio surgery
in New York. I've been added since nineteen eighty six
(47:40):
years of experienced thousands of patients treated over decades, about
four decades of thousands of patients, with probably the most experienced,
the longest experience in New York City, the first with
brain radio surgery, the first with fraction of brain radio
surgery in New York. When all the other hospitals and
(48:01):
centers and radiation places were saying, oh, we'll just do
standard stuff and radiate your healthy brain, they didn't say
that that's what they were doing. Doctor Leedhaman was first
to understand it's better to have focused treatment on the
brain tumor with cancer like gleoblastomas or astrocytomas or metastasis.
Metastasis or cancers that travel to the brain are also
(48:23):
benign tumors like pituitary tumors and meningeomas and acoustic neuromas.
You're the largest experiencing acoustic neuromas with high success where
we treat the brain tumor all non invasively, with no
cutting and no bleeding. This is the work we do.
And again we have information to send you. We have
booklets about brain tumors, and it's best to meet in person.
(48:46):
Like this woman, she now understands why it's so important
to have a doctor with experience, who has more experience.
She went to someplace else. It was close to home,
it was convenient, but the treatment didn't work. The surgery
didn't work, the chemo didn't work. Nothing worked, and now
she's back to get what we hope is better treatment,
(49:07):
more successful treatment for her recurrent glioblastoma. About a man
who's from Dominican Republic, forty eight years old. He's a
Hispanic man only forty eight years old. He came to
us with a T one see prostate cancer glease in
seven PSA five point zero five. And again he was
sent by a surgeon who hates to do surgery. This
(49:29):
sergeant hates to do surgery and prostate cancer because he
knows most men end up impotent, unable to have erections,
unable to have his actual intercourse, normally spontaneously leaking urine,
shortening the penis. The surgeon knew it, and the sergeant
recommended the patient come here. And he came here nearly
ten years ago. He was one hundred and ninety four
(49:51):
pounds five to ten. He never smoked, he never did anything.
There's lots of cancer in the black community and in
the a Spanish community, especially in the communities from a
Caribbean area. Examined him at a large prostate He was
treated nearly ten years ago. And why are we talking
abou him today? Well, guess why he's cancer free. Comes
(50:16):
for a checkups. People ask hey, doctor Liederman, how do
you follow patients. We follow patients, all our patients, all
our patients are invited here for checkups, blood tests and imaging,
whatever is needed. And this is the work we do.
This man is so happy. Nearly a decade later, cancer free.
His sex life works, his urinary life works, is on
(50:36):
no medications. He is so pleased to be ten years
out from an aggressive cancer. This is the work we
do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. I when
I have another man sixty seven years old, born in
New York. He's single. He came with his girlfriend. His
high blood pressure, he had diabetes, He was on a
(50:57):
zimbic and he was found to have a colon cancer
diagnosed just this month. He had an MRI of the
prostate MRI. Prostate was done for a PSA four point one.
He had an MRI showing a pirate one, but he
has a high PSA, so he needs to be evaluated
for the prostate. He also was found to have a
(51:17):
recto mass, so he had a recto mass on the
prostate MRI. So he went in for one thing. He
was found to have another thing and he had a
recto cancer. The first colonoscopy of his life. When we
talk about this, basically every program colonoscopies can save your life,
save your quality of life. If he had colonoscopies on
a regular basis, he most likely would not have had
(51:40):
this rectal cancer or would have been diagnosed early on.
The eurologists saw him. He never did the biops even
though his PSA was high, he never had a PET scan.
We recommended it. He didn't know what a pet scan was.
No one even talked to him about pet scan. He
lost a lot of weight. It could well be for
a mozimbic, but he also could well be from this
(52:01):
rectal cancer. His way, he went from two thirty five
to one ninety six. He lost forty pounds. He's five
't ten. He's the next smoker. And he came to me.
He had a palpable mass in the rectum, he had
nodal involvement, he had questionable other abnormalities. Is a question
of a lymph node in the chest. His PSA was
(52:23):
four point one four. He understands he has about a
twenty five percent chance of ying prostate cancer, and this
is the work we do. So I arranged for a
biopsy of his rectum. We had arranged for a PET
scan and cancer markers, and this is the work we
do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway for rectal cancer.
Not every person wants surgery and chemo. Some people do,
(52:46):
some people don't. This is the choices we give to
every patient. We talk about all the options, and people
like to know the options. This is the work we
do every day. And we talking about a woman who
came to me sixty six years old from Barbados. She
has four children, She has diabetes, high blood pressure, and
she thought she had fullness in her left neck in
(53:07):
a superclavicular area. She had an ultrasound, she had a
thyroid lesion, but it wasn't a serious thyroid lesion. And
then I asked her, Hey, have you had mammograms. No,
she hadn't had mammograms, even though her mother had breast cancer,
her sisters, two sisters had breast cancer, and an aunt
had breast cancer. You think, wow, she'd be the first
(53:28):
person to get a breast cancer with four close relatives
all hewing breast cancer. So we worked up the superclivicular area.
We asked her mammograms and we found cancer of the breast.
And she had Doctor Carsnoman situ DCIS in her breast
six years ago, and she had mammograms, she had ultrasounds,
she had biopsy proven cancer. She was encouraged to be
(53:50):
seen by surgery in medical oncology, and she came here.
She was treated here for her breast cancer with no surgery,
no cutting, no chemo, no hormones, and is now six
years later cancer free. This is the work we do.
We have lots of information, lots of experience about breast cancer,
often women shows, non invasive treatment, now cutting, no bleeding,
(54:11):
no chemo, but all the options are available. My name
is doctor Liederman. It's always best to investigate and come
in person. Call us at two and two choices. Accept
most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.
Speaker 5 (54:26):
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 one two choices. That's
two one two two four six four two three seven.
That's two one two two four six four two three seven.
Speaker 2 (55:03):
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
(55:26):
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, 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
(55:49):
thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to hit your cancer.
Call two one two choices, two one two choices.
Speaker 11 (55:56):
Did you know that you've got choices?
Speaker 6 (56:00):
That there can.
Speaker 4 (56:01):
Be a bad way?
Speaker 11 (56:04):
Did you know that you've got choices?
Speaker 3 (56:09):
Conductor?
Speaker 11 (56:10):
They don't mean today.
Speaker 7 (56:13):
You want to choices?
Speaker 11 (56:15):
A much bad way to want too choices? Conductor, they
don't mean today. Did you know that you've got choices?
Speaker 1 (56:28):
That there can.
Speaker 11 (56:29):
Be a bad way? Did you know that you've got choices?
Speaker 7 (56:37):
Conductor?
Speaker 11 (56:38):
Thea don't mean today to want to choices A much
bad way to want too? Choices, Conductor, they don't mean today.
Speaker 3 (56:53):
Doctor Leiderman, Cancer Treatment thirteen eighty four Broadway.
Speaker 1 (56:57):
The proceeding was a paid podcast. The Art Radio's hosting
of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products
offered or the ideas expressed