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April 20, 2025 • 57 mins
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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 Liderman 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 book with DVD two super convenient Broadway
in thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to hit
your cancer. Call two one two choices two one two choices.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
Prostate cancer very common. Men's cancer worldwide will double by
twenty forty. Thirty five thousand men die here annually from
prostate cancer. What to do? It's doctor Liderman with new news.
New data reveals testing reduces prostate cancer death by twenty percent.
Men's skipping testing have forty five percent more death from

(01:31):
prostate cancer. What to do? Come for prostate cancer screening
at Radio Surgery, New York with doctor Liederman. Easy to
save lives, reduce prostate cancer death, possibly yours or your
loved one. How visit Doctor Liederman thirteen eighty four Broadway
Call two and two choices. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted.

(01:54):
It's easy with doctor Liederman, New York's only Harvard trained
Triple Board certified Radiation on college called Doctor Leederman two
and two choices. It's easy with doctor Liederman. Trying to
save lives. Call Doctor Leaderman two and two choices.

Speaker 4 (02:17):
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

(02:41):
Studios in the heart of New York City, and now
please welcome doctor Leaderman.

Speaker 3 (02:48):
Thank you Rob, and thank you No and thank you
for tuning in now, today and every day. I know
that we have many programs and people that tune in,
listen and spread the word that listeners save lives. How
do listeners save lives? How can you save lives? Well,
you can listen. You can learn. Just like a medical

(03:09):
student start school with no particular knowledge and over a
period of time years and years, learns and then saves lives.
Can implement knowledge that he or she learns and can
take action, and you too, you can learn. You can say, oh,
someone's just getting chemo or radiation or surgery, and can say, hey,

(03:30):
I heard that that may not be the best approach,
that there's other approaches. And you can tell your friend
or neighbor, yourself, or even a spouse, hey, maybe there's
a better way to be treated to save our life
and save our body. And that is so important. Listeners
save lives and The last ad, a little ad that

(03:51):
I recorded just recently, is from real data from Europe
that shows that men who are scheduled for screening for
prostate and show up have a dramatically lower rate of
cancer death. And conversely, men who are scheduled for testing

(04:11):
and don't show up have a dramatically higher rate of death.
So here's one of the first studies of its kind
with thousands of men analyzed. Men who show up for
testing for prostate not that they have cancer, but they
show up on a regular basis, and that would suggest
that they get diagnosed at an earlier point, save lives,

(04:35):
They save their own lives, and men who don't show
up die at a higher rate, at a dramatically higher rate.
So it's a very clear study. Thousands of men analyzed.
Men who show up for screening get tested. Testing for
prostate cancers easy and safe in general. Not showing up, well,

(04:58):
that's easy, but they have such a a higher rate
of dying. So you don't really win anything by not
showing up. And some men feel like they're immortal, that
they're not subject to the laws of health and the
laws of nature, and those men cry the blues. In fact,
this past week, just yesterday at a man sixty years
old crying. He was crying. He had a PSA years ago,

(05:21):
that was twenty and then fifty, and he came to
me with a PSA now of two hundred and fifty
with stage four cancer as a young man, and he
most likely thought he was brave and strong and that
cancer couldn't hurt him, nothing could hurt him. And then
he sat there crying in my office, crying as he

(05:44):
learned that his idea that he was immortal and not
susceptible to health and the maladies that were all susceptible
to has affected him. And we had done testing had
just come for the first time a few weeks ago.
We did testing, we found a high PSA. We arranged

(06:04):
for a biopsy. Biopsy should be simple and safe, and
then we did testing to see where the cancer is.
In the world of cancer, it's always important to know
what you have, what kind of cancer you have, and
where is it. Is it localized, is it confined, or
is it traveled. In his case, he had a cancer.

(06:25):
Remember he had waited, he'd known years ago. His PSA
was twenty years ago, and then it was fifty years ago,
and then he just didn't show up and he came
to me. Recently, we found his PSA was more than
two hundred and two fifty PSA normally should be four.
Then we arrange for a biopsy, which is pretty simple,

(06:45):
safe procedure in general, or tiny little needles are put
in the prostate. And a lot of people say, oh,
can biopsies cause cancer to travel? Well, no, I've never
seen that. I've seen cancer travel from surgery where the
surgeon spread to cancer. It comes back right in the
local area or the general area. But I've not seen

(07:06):
cancer come back from a tiny little needle. So I
believe it's nothing to be fearful about. I think what
should be fearful about is not getting tested and allowing
cancer to grow and spread. Like in this patient who
was sitting there just a day ago, crying that he
missed his chance. And so now we're putting together a package.

(07:26):
And he asked if he could get his wife on
the line, and of course he could, and his wife
was on the line. Well, he was a big strong man,
two hundred and fifty pounds, big strong man from Jamaica,
thought that nothing could hurt him. And now he finds
out that he has stage four prostate cancer. So what's
the lesson of this and the lesson of his study

(07:47):
with thousands of men, The lesson that thousands of men
have shown us that if you come for testing and
get checked out, you have a much higher chance of
saving your life. Nor testing you have a much higher
chance of dying. So what's my message to you. Well,

(08:08):
it's certainly easy to come to doctor Liederman, thirteen eighty
four Broadway, Broadway in thirty eighth Street. We accept most insurances,
Men Care, Medicaid. And I think the lesson is true
actually for many cancers, not just prostate cancer. This particular
study was about prostate cancer, but we could just as
well define it about women who have breast evaluation or not.

(08:29):
And I can tell you so many stories and I'll
be telling you actual true stories later in this program
and every program about women who come early for breast
cancer and people who come late, and what the difference is.
The difference is huge. So if you're a man and
you've not been tested for prostate please come in. If
you don't know what your PSA is, please come in.

(08:50):
If you're a wife or a girlfriend or daughter or
loved one of a man, any man, whether it's your
brother or your father, or grandfather or son. Get them
to come in. You know, it's a few minutes, and
a few minutes may end up saving lives, saving your
loved one's life. So again, studies have shown, studies have

(09:11):
confirmed men who show up for prostate cancer valuation save
their life at a dramatically higher rate. Men who don't
come in have a dramatically higher rate of death. So
please take it to heart. Please show up. We hope
you do. It's easy to do. Minutes may save your life.

(09:32):
This is doctor Liederman at thirty four Broadway Broadway in
thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City.
Well accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. Saving your life may
take minutes. The alternative may be disaster. My name is
doctor Liederman. I'm going to introduce myself more in a
few minutes. I want to talk about another patient who

(09:53):
came in, and it's actually a pretty dramatic story in
the same kind of way. A man came in with
wife just yesterday. He had a cancer of the tongue.
He had gone elsewhere for a radiation and chemo for
a cancer of the tongue. He had a cancer of
the base of the tongue. The base of the tongue
is a part of the tongue that's attached to the bone,

(10:15):
so it serves kind of as a foundation for the tongue.
Of course, we need our tongue for eating, we need
our tongue for speaking and other purposes. So this man
had a cancer not of the mobile part, not the
part of the tongue that you really see or that
pulls food back on their mouth, but at the base
of the tongue. It's the origin of the tongue that's
a part of the tongue that's connected to the bone

(10:36):
where it serves as a foundation. So he had a
cancer of the base of the tongue, and he had
chemo and radiation and a super duper hospital. And now
he comes in with a recently long story. He's there
with his wife, and he's had lots of complications from
standard radiation elsewhere, not our radiation, difficulty eating and difficulties speaking.

(10:59):
But cancers come back after standard radiation and after standard chemotherapy.
And he's been going to the super duper place for
a long time and they're there giving him chemo and
chemo and chemo. You know, chemo number one costs about
one hundred to two hundred thousand dollars a year, so
it's expensive. And we know number two that chemotherapy, like

(11:21):
for most diseases, I should tell you most diseases, chemotherapy
by itself does not cure the cancer, and certainly in
his case, it had had chemotherapy with radiation in the past,
so it obviously didn't work properly because the purpose of
that initial treatment was to cure him, and he was
not cured. The cancer's back. So he's there in our

(11:43):
office talking about what other people are plenty to do,
and it seems like the other people have done all
the tests, but they've either ignored the reading of the
test or ignored telling the patient and his loved one
what the test showed. So it's really pretty dramatic. And
we see this all the time where tests are done

(12:04):
but they're not explained to the patient. And that's exactly
what happened in this patient. And it may be it
seems to me that they were totally ignored. Why do
I say that, Well, seven months ago, this man had
a recurrence of the base of tongue cancer, he had
a biopsy. Then he had a PET scan at super
Duper super pooper pooper place, and well, the pet scan

(12:25):
showed lymph nodes in the neck, they were highly suspicious
for cancer, and lymph nodes in the chest and the
media styinum. The media stynum is a part of the
body between the right lung and the left lung where
the esophagus is and where the heart is and other
structures are, and he had lymph nodes there. Remember he

(12:46):
was diagnosed with the recurrent cancer seven months ago, and
then they repeated another PET scan about two months ago,
and everything's getting worse. All all these months, it's five months.
He had no treatment. There was no treatment. He had
recurrent cancer in the tongue, the lymphodes in the right neck,

(13:08):
the lymphodes in the chest. He was never told about
the lymphodes and there was no treatment. Five months go
by with active cancer. They repeat the PET scan and
everything's worse. And now they've started chemotherapy. And remember chemotherapy
for tongue cancers and most cancers. I will tell you
that they were never told this. Chemotherapy by itself does

(13:31):
not cure the cancer, might slow down the cancer for
a short period of time, but does not cure the cancer.
Now they're planning more radiation. They say, Oh, what they're
going to do is super duper fancy radiation. Well they're
going to radiate the base of the tongue. Well, the
base of the tongue has already received a huge amount
of radiation. Number one. Number two. The main action here

(13:54):
in this case is not the base of the tongue,
but it's in the lymphodes. And the pet scan showed
that the cancers growing in the lymphnodes. And the patient
and his wife sat there shocked, shocked that he had
cancer that already traveled stage four. While the doctors at
super Duper General. Let's you tell that every hospital thinks

(14:14):
are super duper General. While the doctors at super Duper
General were totally ignoring the extent of the cancer. And
I talked about just a few minutes ago, the purpose
of cancer doctor, my view, is to establish what the
diagnosis is and where is the cancer. And at no
time was the family told and this is both the

(14:35):
husband the patient and the wife said they were never
told there was cancer in the lymph nodes, and they
were never told that the cancer was growing, and they
were never told that it's staged four cancer, and they
were never even offered a biopsy to confirm that. And
coming to Radio Sirtan New York doctor Liederman in one
short consultation allowed them to understand so much that the

(14:59):
te that they were getting, in my view, was not
the best treatment. In fact, I don't think it would
be useful. In fact, I think it would be devastating
to double the dose of radiation of the base of tongue,
which didn't work the first time. Number one, Number two
ignoring that the cancer had already traveled to the lymphodes
in the neck, and the media steynum that he had

(15:19):
number three stage four cancer. It could be easily confirmed
by putting a little needle in the lymphodes, and we
offered to arrange all of this in a jiffy. He
came for an hour, remember elsewhere in general, he had
been seven months going on with recurrent base of tongue cancer,
seven months with his cancer to come back with no

(15:42):
real treatment and no real knowledge that the cancer traveled.
And I think that they were, on one hand, shocked
to hear that the cancer traveled. Shocked they weren't told
that the cancer had traveled to the lymphodes, and they said,
what's right there in the report they came with the
actual report, said, well, it's right here in the report.

(16:02):
It shows that the lymphnodes are involved, and we know
that chemotherapy by itself will not cure that kind of cancer.
And shocked number three that they were not even told
and that there was no effort to document the extent
of the cancer. And that's why it's so important. That's
why so many people come to Radiocert in New York
to get clarity, to understand what's happening to them, to

(16:24):
be clear, to be set on a path, and then
to have treatment where the doctors are fighting for the patient,
not fighting for the most expensive chemotherapy or the most
expensive radiation, but rather for the most life saving, clearing
methods of treatment that can be ministered outpatient, most commonly

(16:44):
in our office, where we've treated more than forty thousand
patients over decades. And that's why so many people with cancer,
whether it's new cancer, newly diagnosed, or recurrent cancer come
to Radiocert to New York Doctor Liederman, thirty eighty four Broadway,
or except most insurances Medicare and Medicaid and the wife said, oh,
we like Super Duper General because we get everything done there.

(17:06):
I said, well, yeah, everything's been done there, but it's
all wrong. They haven't told you about the lymphnodes. They're
giving you a chemotherapy that offers no chance to be cured.
They're not telling you that what stage he has, which
is staged four. They haven't addressed the issues, and it's
taken them seven months to come up with the wrong
diagnosis and treatment in my view, and this is the

(17:28):
work that we do every day at Radio Serdy, New York.
And yeah, you can say, well, we didn't know, but
the documents were their documents. They ordered the test, they
ordered the pet scans, and they never reviewed it, they
never revealed it, and maybe never even knew it themselves.
And now the patient said, I'm going to go back
there and tell them. And I said, well, if the
patient has to tell the doctor at Super Duper General

(17:51):
how to run the case, then the patient should seek
another option. And that's why so many people to Radio
Surgery New York. Whether it's first or second or third whatever,
there's three reasons why people come to Radio sit in
New York doctor Liederman, thirty tenty four Broadway Broadway in

(18:11):
thirty eight Street in the heart of New York City,
or accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. The three reasons are
to get checked out. Like I talked a few minutes ago,
like men who get checked out for prostate cancer have
a markedly lower risk of dying, and men who don't
get checked out have a markedly higher risk of dying
from prostate cancer. And that's true, is I believe for

(18:32):
most cancers, whether it's breast cancer, colon cancer, if you've
not had if your woman has not had mammograms and
ultrasounds of your breast, if you're a human being and
you've not had colonoscobee, those things should be done. There's
so many things that can be done to check you out,
and that's why so many people come. Number one, to
get checked out. Number two, if you're newly diagnosed, newly

(18:53):
diagnosed with cancer and you want care, give us a call.
And number three, if you been diagnosed in Trudd elsewhere
like this man with a base of tongue cancer. You're
not satisfied or you're not getting anywhere, you're not getting better.
This is the reason people come here for treatment and evaluation,
so for clarity, for peace of mind, for innovative treatment,

(19:17):
to meet the doctor first in America performing stereotactic body
radio surgery, non invasive treatment, no cutting, no bleeding, but
high success where we attack the cancer as an outpatient.
This is the work that we do. We have a
lot of information to send you. You can call now
or tonight or whenever or never call us two and
two choices. You can call two and two choices to

(19:40):
get an appointment, which is always best. It's always best
to meet in person and call two and two choices
to get a package of information sent to you. Many
people come into our office. We're in the heart of
New York City, thirty to eighty four Broadway, near Times
Square and Macy's and Pensation Grand Central Port Authority. There's
a half a million people in our neighborhood. Maybe you

(20:01):
are a neighbor in our neighborhood. Every day stop in
at thirtyenty four Broadway Radio SIRD in New York and
get a package of information for yourself or your family,
or a loved one or the person down the street.
And if you hear someone talking about cancer and you're
just so confused and so upset, like this man who
I met just yesterday with prostate cancer. If you hear

(20:23):
about someone so upset and concerned and lost, pat him
on the shoulder and say, hey, you may want to
meet doctor Liederman. Thirty tenty four Broadway Broadway in thirty
eighth Street, have them call us at two and two
choices or stop in. I'm doctor Liederman. We'll be right back.

Speaker 5 (20:40):
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 promised, when surgery was to fail to pass,

(21:03):
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

(21:27):
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 3 (21:40):
It's doctor Liederman with guy talking about skin cancer treatment options.

Speaker 6 (21:44):
You treated me. 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 3 (21:55):
So you are hats and we're going to Olympics. Usually
in America there's three million skin cancers a year. Ninety
nine percent of people were let down the primrose path
to have radical mos surgery for their skin cancer. Why
are you different.

Speaker 6 (22:07):
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 3 (22:17):
If Miss America comes up to right now, what would
she think about the results of your skin.

Speaker 6 (22:21):
She would be able to keep her 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 Leadman. I tell anybody who's going down the same path,
Doctor Leiderman did the absolute perfect thing. That's where you
should go.

Speaker 3 (22:32):
Any regrets, not at all. Call doctor Liederman at two
and two choices, thirteen to eighty four Broadway. Most insurances Medicare,
Medicaid accepted.

Speaker 4 (22:41):
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 treat prostate cancer not invasively. He
was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery,

(23:01):
and he's the first in America and in the Western
Hemisphere with body radiosurgery. You can also call doctor Liderman
at two and two choices for a free informative booklet
and DVD. Hey doctor Liderman, we're back.

Speaker 3 (23:14):
We are back. You just searched from one of our
patient's guy who had a skin cancer, and he just
did not want to have a deformity on his face.
He's a handsome man, he's an athlete, and he had
a friend he said had cancer treatment. Skin cancer like
often basal cell and squamous cancers of the body. Many

(23:34):
are on the face, Many are related to his Sonnets
believed there's three million skin cancers a year in America
and most sad desire treated with surgery, often Moe's mohs
Mo surgery. Most surgeries are kind of in my view,
deforming surgery, where they take out a chunk of the
skin of the person around the cancer and then patch

(23:54):
it up or try to pull things up. And guys
explaining how one of his best friends had the skin
cancer and he thought it was like a melon baller.
There's a big hunk of his skin and left him
toform and he didn't want that. And he came and
he actually called in and talked about his uh skin
cancer treatment. And he came in later and uh, we

(24:18):
took recording from a telephone call and he talked about
his skin cancer and you can't see there's anything there.
It's totally gone, which is great. The success right in
treating skin cancers in her office, which the unique doses
is about ninety five percent, so it's very high success
with no cutting and no bleeding. We treat many many
skin cancers, basal cell and squamous cancers and other cancers too.

(24:42):
So if you have a skin cancer and you don't
want to have deforming surgery, you may wish to call us.
We have a package of information to send to you.
You can call again two and two choices. The number
of digits, by the way is two and two two
four six four, two three seven two and two to
two four six forty two thirty seven. My name is

(25:02):
doctor Leader. May have an extensive experience. I have information
to send to you about skin cancer. And of course
it's always best to meet in person. Lots of people call,
but you can't get the same information in his meeting.
That's why I really insist that we meet in person.
Whether it's skin cancers or brain cancers, or lung or breast,
or prostate or pancreas or liver or intestine, or primary

(25:26):
cancers or metacetic cancers. This is the work that we
do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in
thirty eighth Street. I want to talk about a skin
cancer but this is a little bit different. It's a
squamous carcinoma, which we just talked about that we do extensively.
But this is a man who's forty two years old.
He's born in New York City as a carpenter, and
he had a lump on his penis. He had a

(25:48):
lump on his penis for three years, the size of
a dime. And he went to one of the biggest
super duper hospitals. He did a blood test and he
did a biopsy and it was a well differentiated squamous carcinoma.
And he otherwise is okay. His blood count was okay.
He had a biopsy and at this super Duper General
they sent him for radical surgery and his penis. This

(26:11):
is a forty two year old man and he just
did not want to have part of his penis removed
with radical surgery. And the doctors at Super Duper General
did not offer him any options. They told him that
he had to have cancer. It's going to eat away
at his penis and he'd be deformed forever. And he

(26:34):
was really upset, and a radio listener like you, said, hey,
why don't you go see doctor Liederman. The years ago
about five years ago, he came to us with his
squamous carcinoma skin cancer, but of the penis, and it
was about the size of a dime. And he told
me how the doctors explained how they're going to do

(26:55):
a partial amputation of his penis, and he just did
not want to be deformed or impaired or shortened like
they proposed, and he refused at super duper general. They
did not tell him all the options, which is so
different because if you come here to radio Surgery in
New York, you'll see art on the wall and packages

(27:18):
with information showing all the options. We talk about chemo
and surgery in various forms of radiation, multi modality therapy,
even no therapy, but we also talk of course about radiosurgery,
and this man years ago, chose to have radiosurgery focused
treatment on that part of his body, this penis, where

(27:39):
this squamous carcinoma arose, and we treated him. We treated
him easily, safely, there were no side effects. And while
we're talking about him now five years later, well, we
just came back for a checkup and he's in impeccable health.
He's doing well, he's pleased, the cancer's gone, never came back,
never had surgery, never had chemo, only a few out

(28:03):
patient therapies here at Radio Surgery, New York. And this
is what we do. And why are we talking about it, Well,
we're talking about because it's number one the work we
can do. You may not know anyone with cancer the penis.
You probably won't the rest your life, but you probably
surely we know people who have cancers of the skins,
squamous cell or basal cells, and even in delicate locations,

(28:25):
whether it's on the face or the eye, or the
ear or the mouth or in this man's case, the penis.
We have high success, high quality of life. And this
is the work that we do every day at thirteen
eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the
heart of New York City. We have information to send
to you. We're happy to answer your questions. It's always

(28:46):
best to meet in person. And I We'll take a
minute to just tell you that we're live on the radio.
So it's a little secret that we're live on the radio,
and you can call us. You can call in with
all your questions. Somebody say, well, why don't you talk
about X Y Z. Well, here's your chance to talk
about X y Z. You can call us at one
eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. We're live
on the radio. Another secret. We're live today from now

(29:09):
till noon and from one to two, So you're welcome
to calin with all your questions. One eight hundred three
two one zero seven ten. It's live at WR and
Noah will pick up your phone call and Noah will
put your call right through. And you don't have to
be bashful or ashamed. We won't even know who you
are if you don't want to identify yourself, but you
can call and ask your questions and anything that's burning.

(29:30):
They say, why doesn't doctor Liederman talk about this or
doctor Liederman talk about that? Well, we talk about it.
And if you have a particular question that we're missing,
well then call us up one eight hundred three two
one zero seven ten. And also said I'd introduce myself.
My name's doctor Gil Liederman. I was born and raised
in Waterloo, Iowa. Went to public schools, University Medical School MD,

(29:51):
real medical doctor MD at age twenty five, just on
my brother Ted, doctor Ted Liederman also Illustrious doctor twenty
five and doctor Ariel leaderman, my son who's here, board certified,
trained at major hospitals across America, one of the best
medical schools, and is here also loved by his patients.

(30:13):
Is thorough and meticulous and thoughtful and caring and goes
the extra mile for every patient. And if you're lucky,
you get to see doctor Ariel Liederman who can help
answer your cancer questions and even treat you. Board certified,
top notch, excellent, thorough, compulsive, hardworking doctor. There's three Doctor

(30:35):
Liderman's almds at twenty five real doctors, real medical doctors,
and uh, we're here for you at thirty four Broadway.
So that's my background, my son's background, my brother also,
after I was MD at twenty five, I went onto
the EU Worsar of Chicago Michael Reese, trained for three
years in internal medicine, board certified an internal medicine, then

(30:57):
went on to Harvard Medical School at the prestigious Data
Far Cancer Institute, trained in medical oncology, treated thousands of
patients there, board certified in medical oncology, and then went
on at Harvard Medical School the Joint Center for Radiation Therapy,
trained there for three more years, board certified, treated thousands
of patients and in fact one of the only Harvard

(31:19):
trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologists in the world, the
only one in New York for sure, and the rare breed,
the only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation cancer doctor
in New York, one of the few in the world.
Here for you at thirty dy four Broadway, and she

(31:40):
tell you that not only are we here every Sunday
from eleven to twelve noon and from one to two pm,
but also on WR on Saturdays from eleven to noon,
from one to two, three to four and five to
six pm, and then every night at midnight from twelve

(32:03):
midnight until one am, and every Saturday night till Sunday morning,
we're here from midnight till four am. So there's lots
of times on WR you can tune in to hear
different news about different patients and learn different things. So again,
our schedule on WR is on Saturdays from eleven am

(32:26):
till noon, from one to two pm, three to four pm,
and five to six pm, and then on Sundays from
eleven until noon and from one to two in the afternoon.
On Sundays, every night at midnight and then Saturday night
until Sunday from midnight until four am, so lots of

(32:49):
times to listen and learn. And this is the special
work that we do every day, so you can hear
us every day on the radio, and we're here to educate.
That's the only reason we're not selling anything. You don't
hear me pushing anything, but we're trying to push the
truth and push facts and push things to learn so
you can live better and live longer. And that's also

(33:09):
true for your family and your neighbors and everyone that
you talk to. And you can, God forbid, if you
hear someone concerned about their cancer diagnosis or possible cancer diagnosis,
give them a pat on the back and say, hey,
it's probably time that you meet doctor Liederman. And again,
if you want to package information, just tell us what
you want to package about what topic, because there's different topics.

(33:33):
Brain radiosurgery were first in New York with brain radio surgery.
Body radio surgery with first in America and the Western
Hemisphere with body radio surgery, with thousands of patients treated
with information about brain tumors and skin cancers and lung
cancers and pancreas and liver and prostate and bladder. So
many cancers, primary cancer as well as metastatic cancers. This

(33:55):
is the work that we do every day at thirteen
eighty four Broadway. My name is doctor Liederman. We'll be
right back.

Speaker 7 (34:03):
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 Leederman with
prostate cancer and high PSA. Doctor Liederman explained all options,

(34:23):
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

(34:45):
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 (35:01):
It's doctor Liederman with Calvin West singing and writing about
his cancer treatment.

Speaker 1 (35:08):
I had cancer and my home was outside.

Speaker 8 (35:15):
At the radio serge you read.

Speaker 3 (35:20):
Well, we got choices. I'm so glad that we do.

Speaker 2 (35:30):
You want to thank doctor Trenomno phone me and you.

Speaker 8 (35:40):
Heliet your cancer.

Speaker 7 (35:42):
It's my counting.

Speaker 8 (35:43):
Oh what two three wells?

Speaker 1 (35:48):
No more pay is reading your brand daddy?

Speaker 5 (35:52):
Such you free?

Speaker 3 (35:53):
Can't you treatment? Called doctor Leederman two and two choices,
two and two choices called doctor Liederman.

Speaker 4 (35:59):
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 in Basically,
he was the first in New York with fractionated brain
radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in

(36:22):
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.

Speaker 3 (36:32):
Thank you so much. I want to talk about a
sixty one year old man born in Jamaica. He's married
with two daughters. He came with his friend for evaluation
of a prostate cancer. He came with a glease in
seven cancer. So Gleason understood there's different kinds of prostate cancer.
Made a scale from two which is the best, ten
which is the worst. This man had a glease in
seven cancer. He had a PSA of seven point nine.

(36:56):
PSA is that blood test prostatic specific andigen. He had
a cat scan it was negative, a bone scan it
was negative. His primary doctor found the high PSA. He
went to urologist. He had a biopsy. He had eight
cores positive in Gleason seven and he had seven cores
positive Gleason six. He was urinating three times a night.

(37:18):
He did not want any medicines even though he was
urinating three times a night. Most men want to get better.
Not every man wants medicine. Something got addicted, which is
in my view crazy, I think it. Most men should
want to get urinating better, and there's medicines for that,
and most men should want to be treated. He had

(37:40):
a bone scan, he had a biopsy. He had no
prostate cancer in his family. He had never been in
a hospital. His mother had a cancer, but did not
die of that. He has no kind and I examined him.
He had a large prostate, he had aggressive cancer, multiple
cores positive. He came here ten years ago. So why

(38:01):
I've been talking about today, Well, it came this past
week for checkup. And of course we always ask our
patient to come for checkup on a regular basis. Every
patient should, like we talked about a few minutes ago.
Even if you're not a patient, you really should come
and get checked out on a regular basis. We know
you have a better chance of living longer and avoiding
unnecessary death by showing up. And this man ten years

(38:26):
later as PSA is zero. He had a glease in
seven PSA seven point nine stage t one see prostate cancer.
And this is the work we do, and we know elsewhere.
If you had standard radiation elsewhere, his success is sixty percent.
If you had radical surgery. With radical surgery, success rate
is sixty percent. With radical surgery for prostate cancer, ninety

(38:51):
plus percent of men end up impotent, eighty percent end
up leaking urine, the penis is shortened, there can be
other complications in the hospital. So most men who know
better want the best chance to be cancer free, and
this is the work that we do every day. We'll
show you the data. We can also mail you a
package of information about our special work. So why should

(39:13):
a man with prostate cancer come here? Well, most likely
have the experience of nine thousand mintry to prostate cancer,
high success rate, high quality of life, avoiding hospitals, avoiding
radical surgery, most likely keeping your sexual life in urinary life,
and not having a shortening of your body. So it's
so important to get checked out. In my view, this

(39:37):
is the work we do, and we'll show you comparison
data for major centers across America, whether it's with radical
surgery or proton beam or various forms of radiation. This
is the work that we do every day. This man
is very happy ten years later, sixty one years old
when he came here. He's now seventy seventy one and
at least in seven cancer PSA seven point nine cancer

(40:00):
free as PSA is zero and after successful treatment, the
PSA should be headed to zero or at zero. This
man's PSA is zero. I wan to talk about another man,
a sixty six year old. He is a black man.
I say that because in the black community one and
six black men get prostate cancer. One in twenty three
will die of prostate cancer. Being black is a risk factor.

(40:24):
Being Jamaican or Caribbean black. It's a risk factor being
a bit older as a risk factor. Having family history.
We have one first degree relative with prostate cancer. Your
risk of dying of prostate cancer is seventy one percent higher.
So there's lots of reasons why men should get checked out.
And we see men. Men are welcome here. Everyone's actually

(40:46):
welcome here. Men, women and children to get checked out,
especially if you have symptoms or especially if you're concerned
about your health. And I think everyone should be concerned
about their health. So this man's sixty six years old,
black man, four children, born in Jamaica. He worked in
a hospital. He had a high PSA and his biopsy
showed Gleason nine cancer. So he was actually diagnosed a

(41:12):
year earlier and he never got treated. He had scans,
he had bone scans, he was seen by a prominent radiologist.
It had a biopsy a year before, and never had
treatment for Gleason nine cancer. Well, getting seen but not
getting treatment doesn't help, Okay. The idea is you get

(41:34):
seen and you get diagnosed and you get treated. So
he had a very high gleasing score. That's how the
cancer looked uto the microscope, very aggressive with surgery. Success
rate is only about twenty percent for Gleason nine cancer
in the best hands in America. It had no treatment
of any kind, no hormones, no pills, no shots. He

(41:55):
was seen by urologists, never got biopsy. His way was
once sixty five foot eight. He had no headaches, hearing
neat he was fine. He never smoked. He never did
anything that caused it. Prest the cancer is not one
of the diseases where you've done something to cause it.
And I examined him. He had four children and worked
in a hospital, but he did not want to go

(42:17):
to that hospital for treatment. He had a biopsy elsewhere,
but did not want to go back to that doctor
wanted to do radical surgery. This man wanted the best
chance to be cancer free for Gleason nine cancer. He
did not want to be in the hospital, did not
want surgery, and he came here. He learned about our results,
and he saw our results, and I said, down and
shore results to every person in their family who come.

(42:39):
He was treated here a decade ago for Gleason nine
cancer and now his PSA is zero, cancer free, so
he's doing great. He's pleased. And that's a PSA is
zero with no hormones, no chemo, no surgery, only treatment
here at Radio Searchery, New York, where people walk in,

(43:00):
the treatment and walk out. That's our goal. That's what
we do. And this man Glease of nine very aggressive cancer,
is doing great ten years later. My name is doctor
Lead him with an extensive experience treating cancer's or most
any part of the body. Huge experience, probably one of
the largest experiences worldwide, and you're welcome to share. Just

(43:21):
call us up at two and two choices. That's two
and two two four six forty two thirty seven. Give
us a call, make an appointment, or it can send
you information or better yet both. So call us if
you want two and two choices. My name is doctor
Liederman and we'll be right back.

Speaker 7 (43:38):
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 lead him in successful treatment of my prostate cancer
the number zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor

(44:00):
Liederman's successful prostate cancer treatment. What every man wants the
numbers one, two, three, four important for every man with
prostate cancer. One getting the most successful treatment, two avoiding
radical robotic surgery, three, keeping sexual functions, four maintaining urinary control.
Call my doctor Leaderman two and two choices, two and

(44:21):
two choices to consider his prostate cancer treatment for you
most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at
thirty eighth, Call two and two choices for prostate cancer treatment.
Called doctor Liederman two on two choices. I'm glad I
did you'll be number one with doctor Leaderman.

Speaker 8 (44:39):
Did you know that you've got choices?

Speaker 3 (44:43):
That there can.

Speaker 8 (44:44):
Be a bad way? Did you know that you've got choices?
Call doctor's leader mean today?

Speaker 5 (44:56):
Who want your choice?

Speaker 7 (44:58):
Say?

Speaker 5 (44:58):
Is a much bad way?

Speaker 3 (45:00):
Ay?

Speaker 8 (45:01):
Two on two choices? Conductor leader means 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

(45:21):
leader means today, too, want to choices? A much bad way?

Speaker 5 (45:29):
Too?

Speaker 8 (45:29):
Onto choice, says conductor leader means today.

Speaker 3 (45:36):
Doctor Leederman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four Broadway.

Speaker 4 (45:41):
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob
Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the w R
Studios in the hearts of New York City. Were just
a few steps from the Radio Surgery New York Cancer
Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman
the leading cancer expert treat prostate cancer not in Basically,
he was the first in or with fractionated brain radio surgery,

(46:01):
and he's the first in America and in the Western
Hemisphere with body radiosurgery. You can also call doctor Liederman
at two and two Choices for a free informative booklet
and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back.

Speaker 3 (46:14):
We are back. I want to talk about a woman
who's just celebrating her hundredth birthday right now. In fact,
she had her birthday five days ago. She's one hundred
years old. And why did a hundred year old woman come? Well,
interesting woman, interesting family. She's one hundred years old, she's widowed.
She came with her daughter. Her daughter lives in the

(46:36):
south of France on the Riviera, and her daughter flies
in to New York to accompany her mother for her
skin cancer treatments. She's had skin cancers on the face,
her foot, her leg. She was seen by a surgeon,
she had a biopsy. She had a squamous cancer on
her forehead. She had been treated all over the body,

(46:57):
the face, the thigh, and elsewhere with surgery, and she's
just fed up with it. She's one hundred years old.
Her daughter doesn't want her to have surgery her she
does not want to have surgery. She had a large
mass on her tempo and she came to so she
actually came to us the first time two years ago.
She was born in Australia. She fell in love with

(47:18):
an American soldier in Australia and brought her to America.
As she probably heard, Australians have a huge epidemic of
skin cancers and melanomas, so she's part of that. She
left Australia when she was let me think here, twenty
three years old. So most people get skin cancers from
sun exposure before the age of eighteen, so most likely

(47:41):
she had plenty of skin cancer exposure meaning sun before
the age of twenty three when she left Australia. She'd
fall in love with an American soldier. And now she
came in with a mass on her tempo and the
mass in the tempo was thick and bulky. This is
now two years ago. That was treated because she just

(48:03):
did not want to have deformity on her face. And
she received our treatment, non invasive, no cutting, no bleeding
treatment on her face. She came in outpatient, had treatment,
and then went home. And that's how it was. Her
daughter flew in from France to accompany her. So lots

(48:23):
of love in her family between her daughter and grandchildren
and others. She's now one hundred two years later, she
is cancer free from our treatment, and she actually has
another skin cancer. It's the skin cancer. It's thick on
her leg, and she and her family have made accommodations
for her to come after her birthday, which she just

(48:44):
celebrated a few days ago, to come and get treatment
for this thick skin cancer on her leg. It's a
squamous ol And this is the work that we do
every day at thirtenty four Broadway. She's had several skin
cancers true with us, and she said she only wished

(49:04):
she knew about our treatment years ago before she had
all that deforming surgery on her face and chest and
legs and elsewhere. So happy birthday one hundred years. And
another point of this all is that many people come
when they say, oh, their doctor says they can't have
chema or they can't have surgery, and they just should
go home and die well. In fact, number one, we

(49:27):
don't believe in age discrimination. So whether you're a child
or an adult, or even a one hundred year old
or oldest patient, we've treated their members. About one hundred
and six and she had cancer of her bladder and
she was bleeding out, and they told her, oh, she's
too old for surgery, she's too old for chemo, even
though those surgery was not feasible in one hundred and

(49:49):
six year old person, and who would want to have
radical surgery. We can have non invasive treatment. Chemotherapy in
general does not cure anyone with bladder cancer or most cancers.
It came to us terrible bleeding and she was dying
bleeding at one hundred and six, and we treated her
and the bleeding stopped and she was in remission and
lived well after that. And this is the work we do.

(50:12):
So age, in my mind, is not a factor. It's
a little bit sad when people say, Oh, my doctor
won't let me get Colonoscopeku i'm a certain age. My
doctor willt the me to get mammograms because I'm a
certain age. Well, these people are more likely to live
to be one hundred or one hundred and twenty than
the average person, who probably average person America is probably
forty or fifty years of age. So I don't believe

(50:33):
we should discriminate against people by age. We should do
the right thing for everybody, whether they're young or old,
or child, or male or female or whatever. And that's
the work we do. This woman's a hundred with skin
cancer and she's coming for treatment. She's vivacious, she loves
every day of life. She's surrounded by a loving family,
and this is the work that we do. So whether

(50:55):
you're one hundred or one hundred and six or twenty two,
forty two sixty age, you might want to give us
a call. We don't believe in age discrimination. We believe
in informing the patient about all the options and talking
about all the options, and this is the work that
we do every day. At thirteen eighty four Broadway, we

(51:16):
had a lot of information to send you or give
to you in person. This is the work we do.
So for this woman, Happy birthday, and she lived to
be one hundred and twenty or however long, however long God,
and you want, I want to talk about a seventy
three year old woman. She's a woman who has cervix cancer.
So cervix cancer actually worldwide, it's one of the biggest
killers in women. She had metastatic cervix cancer. She came

(51:38):
to me five years ago with metastatic service cancer stage four.
Interesting woman. She's married, she had five children. She came
with her husband. She had high blood pressure, cholesterol. She
was diagnosed with cervice cancer a year before and her
doctors told her a surger is not possible. She was
treated a super duper hospital and she had chemo and radiation,

(52:01):
and then she had vaginal implant radiation into the vagina
which she had chemo and radiation, and it didn't work.
It didn't work. The cancer came right back in the pelvis.
That was biopsy proven. Her weighed was one hundred and
seventy pounds. It was five 't two. She had no headaches,
no pain. Let me say, oh, I don't have any
paddics or no pain or no bleeding. I can't. I

(52:23):
can't have cancer. Well, yes you can. You don't have
to have pain or bleeding or weight loss to have cancer.
And she had a scan that showed inguino and pelvic nodes.
She had pelvic nodes and we biopsy proved them elsewhere.
They're going to give her chemotherapy and she didn't want it.
She'd already had chemotherapy, and we know that chemotherapy doesn't

(52:44):
cure most cancers, and she just didn't want chemotherapy. It
didn't work before. Standard radiation didn't work either. She came
with masses in the palvis area and she wanted to
know what her options were, and she learned here options
that were never told to her elsewhere. And that's another
reason why so many people come to doctor Liederman Radio

(53:06):
Sturty in New York to learn about options that are
often hidden from them elsewhere. And this is the work
we do. And five years ago we found the cancer
in their pelvis that came back after standard radiation and
standard chemotherapy. Elsewhere, doctors wanted to give chemo, which we
know doesn't care anybody with stage four metastatic cervix answer
in most any cancer. In fact, we treat her with

(53:28):
radio storty five years ago, non invasively with pinpoint treatment,
made a stereotyctic frame. It's all easy, painless, non claustophobic.
That's how our treatments are. People walk in, they get
a treatment, and walk out and go for lunch, ago
across the street to Macy's wherever. And this woman five
years ago we treated for stage four metastatic cancer that

(53:50):
standard chemotherapy and standard radiation didn't help. We treated her
non invasively for stage four cancer five years ago and
now five years later with no other treatment, no chemo,
no radiation, no surgery. With our treatment only a few
focus treatments, she is cancer free. She was told elsewhere
she was gonna go home and die with us. Five

(54:10):
years later, she's cancer free, doing well, no side effects,
pleased with her treatment. This is the special treatment we do,
an experience of forty thousand patients over decades. My name
is doctor Liederman, ord certified accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.

Speaker 4 (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 Leederman, the radiosurgery pioneer's goal too.
Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York,
First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liderman hits your
cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades
of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers

(55:26):
from head to toe cancer treatment with possibly a second
chance for you. Meet doctor Leiderman to hit the cancer.
He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist.
Call two one two choices, two one two choices to
meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare,
Medicaid accepted. Free booklet DVD two super convenient Broadway in

(55:49):
thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to hit your cancer.
Call two one two choices, two one two choices.

Speaker 3 (55:56):
Prostate cancer very common men's cancer worldwide. Will forty thirty
five thousand men die here annually from prostate cancer. What
to do? It's doctor Liederman with new news. New data
reveals testing reduces prostate cancer death by twenty percent. Men's
skipping testing have forty five percent more death from prostate cancer.

(56:19):
What to do? Come for prostate cancer screening at Radio Surgery,
New York with doctor Liederman. Easy to save lives, reduce
prostate cancer death, possibly yours or your loved one. How
visit Doctor Liederman thirteen eighty four Broadway Call two and
two choices. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. It's easy with

(56:41):
doctor Liederman, New York's only Harvard trained, Triple Board certified
radiation oncologist. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices. It's
easy with doctor Liederman. Trying to save lives Call doctor
Liederman two and two choices.

Speaker 1 (56:56):
The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's host of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed
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