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 Liderman 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 Leaderman to hit the cancer.
He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologists.
Call two one two choices to 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 Liederman to hit
your cancer. Call two one two choices two one two choices.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
It's doctor Leaderman 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 taate? Call two on two 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.
(01:35):
I'm grateful to Doc taleder Man at New York Radio Surgery.
No cutting, no bleeding, no hospitals. Day made me very happy.
Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eighth If he address,
my cancer had been set straight, called to and two
choices for an Appointment's mate the taleder Men's top right.
Speaker 3 (01:58):
For more information about innovation of cancer treatment, called Doctor
Leaderman two and two choices, two and two choices. Thirteen
eighty four Broadway. Most insurance is accepted for newer recurrent cancers.
Call Doctor Leiderman two and two choices.
Speaker 5 (02:19):
Welcome everybody.
Speaker 6 (02:20):
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 7 (02:49):
Thank you Rob, and thank you Noah, and thank you
for tuning in today and every day. We're on the
radio every day. Why to educate so you get better knowledge,
better care. If God forbid you, or your loved one,
or your neighbor or friend, or even the person down
the street has calamity diagnosed with cancer.
Speaker 8 (03:08):
And don't know where to turn. You've learned.
Speaker 7 (03:11):
You've learned a lot, just like a medical student learning
every day going to medical school. You day after day
listen to the radio show, learn a lot about different
kinds of cancers, different options, the politics of cancer, the
economics of cancer.
Speaker 8 (03:26):
You learn a lot.
Speaker 7 (03:28):
And this is what we do every day is to educate,
Number one. And of course I see patients and offer
information and offer consultation to people with either possible cancer
or people want to know if they have cancer. And
there's lots of people want to know if they have cancer,
do have cancer or the breast or the lung, or
the pancreas, or a liver, or the prostate, or the
(03:50):
bladder or the intestines or wherever, primary or metastatic, or
I want to know. So the first category of people
I want to know. And then the second category or
people that have just been diagnosed with cancer and they
want to know the best treatment. First, they want to
know all the options. It seems so often options are
(04:11):
hidden from patients elsewhere, and here we have signs up.
We have the art of radio surgery on the walls,
and I talk about it. We give out booklets about
all the options, so we don't hide anything. Everything's spoken about,
and we educate so people learn all the options, and
many people find great comfort in knowing all the options
(04:33):
at the beginning. That's for the newly diagnosed people. And
then the third category. Remember the first is I want
to know if I have cancer or not. The second
I have cancer, but I want to know the best option.
And then the third category of people that have gone
elsewhere and the treatment just hasn't worked, or isn't tolerated,
or isn't wanted. And sometimes all three and they want
(04:54):
to come and see what they can do to salvage
to help themselves at that point, even though they've had
chemo or amunotherapy or radiation or surgery, they want to
know about other options. And many, many people feel like
they're not being told all the straight dope, all the
straight information. And that's why so many people find it
(05:14):
reassuring to come here, far from drug companies and big
hospitals and surgeons and chemo, to learn all the options
from New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation
cancer doctor. That's the work that we do. My name
is doctor Gil Liederman. I'll introduce myself in a few minutes,
(05:35):
but that's why we're here today, and that's what we do.
I want to jump right in because I have a
multiple very interesting patients to talk about. The first man
I want to talk about, it's a sixty two year
old man born in Italy. He's married. He came years
ago with kidney cancer. He was diagnosed about six years ago.
He had a weight loss and he had an aggressive
(05:58):
cancer and weakness and dizziness. He had no blood in
the urine and he went to a super duper pooper
place and they told him they have to cut out
the kidney. They have to cut out the kidney. Maybe
we'll cut out a little bit of the kidney, but
they cut out all the kidney.
Speaker 8 (06:15):
And that's what so commonly happens.
Speaker 7 (06:17):
Often that certain says, well, maybe I'll cut out just
a little bit, but so often the whole kidney's removed.
And this patient went to one of the super pooperous
stupors doctors at one of the super pooper is hospitals
in New York. And believe me, every hospital and every
president I know, most all of them feel like they
have the super spoopers of them all. But this man
(06:40):
went to a super pooper place and the doctor told him,
you have to cut it out. You have to do
it emergently. It's a kidney cancer. And they didn't give
him any options. They didn't even buy up see the
kidney beforehand. They just said, you got to cut it out.
I remember when we see kidney cancer, about ten percent
of the time there's not even a cancer. When the
radiologist says it looks like a cancer. For some of
(07:00):
the time there's no cancer. And then what happens. The
patient lost their kidney because the surgeon is so hot
to cut out the kidney. What are they're going to
do the next day, the surgeon walks in the patients
rooman say, oh, I have good news for you. There
was no cancer. Well that's not good news. The patient
is thinking, my god, why did they cut out my kidney?
Give me my kidney back. By then, they can't do that,
(07:22):
So we do things totally differently. Patients that come here
or offered a biopsy of the kidney, you can refuse it.
You can decline it if you want. But biopsies are
really easy and safe. You can just put a tiny
little needle. And I know a lot of people say, oh,
if you do a biopsy will spread the cancer. Personally,
I have not seen that. I've seen spread of the
cancer after radical surgery, big surgeries, but I've not seen
(07:46):
cancer recurrent after tiny little needle biopsies. So this man
went with his kidney cancer to a super duper big
hospital and he was told he had to have his
kidney removed, and he did it. He thought, well, if
they it's a super duper place, they told me you
have to do it. He thought you had to do it. Well,
I saw him subsequently, I said to him. I really
(08:08):
asked him, did they tell you you can have your
kidney cut out at Super Duper General, or you can
see doctor Liederman and doctor Liederman can do a biopsy
first to see if it's cancer or not, and maybe
you don't even have cancer. Did the doctors tell you that? No,
nobody at Super Duperor told me that. And then I
asked the patient, well, when they said I have to
(08:29):
cut out your kidney, did they say, well, you can
cut out your kidney here and you'll never have that
kidney again. Or you can go see doctor Liederman and
he probably can do radio surgery.
Speaker 8 (08:40):
He's done the most.
Speaker 7 (08:40):
He's done forty thousand patients over decades, first in New
York and first in America and first in the Western Hemisphere.
Did the doctor did the surgeon? A surgeon who operates
on the kidney is called a urologist, euro means the
urinary system and ologist to someone who studies, but really
it's a surgeon. Did the eurogy just tell the patient
(09:01):
that you could have surgery with him or you could
go see doctor Liederm and have nonsurgical treatment and save
your kidney. And doesn't make sense to save your kidney
and have no cutting and no bleeding with very high
success rate, all out patient, no surgery, no cutting, no bleeding,
no pain, and you're left with your kidney with high
(09:23):
chance that the cancer never comes back. Well, this man
was never told that either, and so he had his
kidney removed. And well what happened, Well, about five years
ago he came to me with that same kidney that
the cancer started and had spread to the liver, and
they were giving him chemotherapy at the Super Duper General.
(09:46):
So first of all they gave they didn't give him.
They charged him for removing the kidney. And then the
cancer traveled anyway and it went to the liver, and
they were giving him chemo and chemo and chemo and chemo,
and it wasn't working. The cancer was grown long in
the liver and he had more symptoms. He had pain,
and the cancer not only traveled to the liver, but
(10:06):
also traveled to the right and left lung. So he
went from a localized cancer in the liver for centimeters
now with liver metastasis and metastas to the lung.
Speaker 8 (10:18):
And he lost to weight.
Speaker 7 (10:19):
He went from two hundred and thirty pounds down to
one hundred and eighty pounds and the cancer traveled and
he came to me. He came to me after he
had his kidney removed. He came to me after he
had years of chemotherapy that wasn't working. And he said,
Doctor Liederman, can you treat me? Can you use radio
surgery for my kidney? Cancer traveled to the liver. And
(10:40):
I looked at all his diagrams and images and cat
scans and pet scans and records and examine the patient.
I said, yes, this is the work that we do.
In fact, we can treat cancers most anywhere in the body,
primary cancers. I was like, for this man, would be
the cancer in the kidney or metastatic cancers. I would
be like the cancer and the liver or the lungs.
(11:03):
He said, Doctor a Leader, I want you to take
care of my worst cancer that's in my kidney right
And I said, yes, you have a big mass in
your kidney. He said, I want you to take care
of it because I've had the surgery on my kidney
and chemotherapy. It just is not working. The cancer is growing.
And so years ago he came to me and we
treated the cancer in the kidney with radiosurgery, non invasive.
(11:26):
Excuse me, the kidcer in the liver. The kidney had
already been removed. We treated the cancer and deliver. The
chemo wasn't working, and it usually doesn't work very well
for kidney cancer. In fact, overall, chemo doesn't work very
well for most diseases. Not every disease, but most diseases,
and most diseases the cancer. Even if it works for
(11:46):
a few weeks or months, usually the cancer comes rip
roaring back. And that's exactly what happened in this man.
He had a lot of chemotherapy and a lot of
side effects, and the cancer and.
Speaker 8 (11:56):
Deliver just kept on growing.
Speaker 7 (11:58):
And so we treated him about five years ago to
the liver, not invasively, no cutting.
Speaker 8 (12:05):
No bleeding.
Speaker 7 (12:06):
And then the doctors from super Duper General said, oh,
you can't go to doctor Liederman. You need more chemo,
and they convinced him to go back to Super Duper General. Remember,
chemotherapy is generally about one hundred to two hundred thousand
dollars a year, and he went back. He believed them again.
He believed them to remove the kidney, he believed them
(12:27):
to give him chemo. After removing the kidney. He believed
them to give chemo when they spread the liver, and
then we treated him, and then he decided to go
back and believe him again. And for the last two
years he's had more chemo, and the cancer's growing in
multiple spots in his body, multiple spots in his body.
It's throwing in the right lung, the left lung, and
(12:48):
the media steynum, the higher nodes. The chemo's not working,
and like I said before, chemotherapy usually doesn't work very
well for most diseases.
Speaker 8 (12:57):
Why do people get it?
Speaker 7 (12:58):
Well, I guess there's a there's a system in America
that everyone thinks chemo is so fantastic, and about eighty
percent of people who get chemotherapy falsely believe that the
chemotherapy is going to cure them, when in fact there's
no chance of that. So eighty percent of people getting
chemo think they are led to believe by their doctors
(13:21):
that chemo's going to cure them, when in fact it's
just the opposite. For most cancers, not all, but for
most cancers, chemo doesn't cure anybody. And for kidney cancers
that traveled you will see that's true. So then he
came back to me. Now, last week he came back
to me. So remember his kidney removed, wasn't offered any options.
Then the cancer traveled to the liver and the lungs
(13:44):
he had chemo didn't work. He came to me for
the liver. Several years ago. We trid the liver, and
now he comes back to me and he says, doctor Liederman,
and all my treatment, I've had five years of treatment
for surgery and chemo and emmunotherapy. The only treatment that
worked was your treatment. And we reviewed his records and yes,
that mass in the liver. In fact, the whole liver
(14:05):
is cancer free. What we treated years ago with radiosurgery
is cancer free. The cancer never came back. And that's
the beauty of radiosurgery that it's durable, that it lasts,
which is totally different than chemo roemuotherapy. That's why so
many people come here. So now he's coming begging, please,
(14:26):
doctor Liederman, please treat my cancer in the chest because
the chemo's not working, immunotherapy is not working, and I
have all the side effects.
Speaker 8 (14:35):
And that's what we're doing. And we have proof.
Speaker 7 (14:38):
Here's a man he had surgery at Super duper general
for the kidney. The cancer traveled anyway. Whatever they did,
the cancer traveled. Then it went to the liver. He
had chemo, it didn't work. Then it went to the lungs.
He had more chemo, didn't work. The only treatment he's
had in his lifetime, and this has been going on
now for years, is radiosurgery. A few treatments, pinpoint treatments,
(15:00):
non invasive to the cancer and deliver and yes, people say,
what can you treat? Can you treat the brain, Yes,
we treat the skin, Yes, we treat the lymphodes, Yes,
the long the media steynum, deliver, the pancreas, the spleen,
the kidney, of course, the bladder, got ecologic colo rectos
sarcoma's bone, primary cancers, metastatic cancers.
Speaker 8 (15:23):
This is the work we do.
Speaker 7 (15:24):
In fact, we've treated about forty thousand patients over decades,
first in New York, first in America, first in the
Western Hemisphere, with very high success rates, very high success rates.
And that's why this man came back first time. He
gave us a chance. We proved it to him, and
now he's back because he understands that chemo and immunotherapy
(15:46):
hasn't worked, the surgery hasn't worked. He has stage four cancer.
And by the way, his function is great. If you
saw this man, it's a six foot two man, strapping,
strong man, handsome man. But he's paying a huge, huge
toll with neuropathy and side effects from that chemotherapy. And
why did he come back because only one treatment of
(16:07):
all his treatments, surgery, chemo, immunotherapy, none of them worked.
That's super duper general. The only treatment that worked was
radiosurgery treating the cancer and the liver. And this is
the work that we do every day. So why so
many people call us at two and two choices. My
name's doctor Liederman, thirteen eighty four Broadway, Broadway in thirty
(16:29):
eight Street in the heart of New York City. You
can call us even now if you want information about
our special work two and two choices, two and two
choices and digits. That's two and two two four six
forty two thirty seven, two and two two four six
forty two thirty seven. If you're being told like this man, oh,
you have to have surgery immediately, you may want to
(16:51):
take a minute, come over for consultation, and it may
pay hands some dividends. And if someone say, oh, you're
gonna have chemo on you with therapy for the rest
of your life, you may say, hey, wait a minute,
I'm gonna think about it, and then call us up
at two and two choices. My name is doctor Liederman,
thirteen eighty four Broadway. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.
(17:14):
If you want information, you can call us now at
two and two choices. If you want to go online,
our website is r s NY dot oorg. Radiosurgery dot
org is our name, Radio surgeryew York dot org.
Speaker 8 (17:31):
R s n y dot org.
Speaker 7 (17:33):
So give us a call, stop by and pick up information.
There's so much ways you can get information here, by calling,
by writing, by emailing. You can even email me at
Gilgil at r s NY dot org.
Speaker 8 (17:47):
We'll be right back.
Speaker 9 (17:48):
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,
(18:10):
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,
(18:35):
Triple Board certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices, two
and two choices for innovative cancer treatment. Best is to
meet doctor Liederman in person. Call two and two choices
two on two choices.
Speaker 3 (18:48):
It's doctor Liederman with guy talking about skin cancer treatment options.
Speaker 5 (18:52):
You treated me.
Speaker 10 (18:53):
I had basal 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
by my face. I don't want any scaring. I think
I'm kind of handsome. I wanted to keep it that way.
Speaker 3 (19:03):
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 or let down the primrose path
to have radical mos surgery for their skin cancer.
Speaker 10 (19:14):
Why are you different 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 (19:25):
If Miss America comes up to here right now, what
would she think about the results of your skin.
Speaker 10 (19:29):
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 Leederman did the absolute perfect thing. That's where you
should go.
Speaker 8 (19:40):
Any regrets, not at all.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
Call Doctor Leederman had two and two choices. Thirteen eighty
four Broadway, most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted.
Speaker 5 (19:49):
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour.
Speaker 6 (19:51):
This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at
the w R studios in the hearts of New York City,
were just a few steps from the Radio Surgery in
New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street.
Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively.
He was the first in New York with fractionated brain
radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in
(20:11):
the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also
call doctor Liederman at two and two choices for a
free informative.
Speaker 5 (20:18):
Booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back.
Speaker 7 (20:21):
We are back, and I want to talk about almost
a mirror image case to the last case. The man
who had the kidney cancer, kidney removed, went to the liver,
went to the lung, had years of chemo. The only
treatment that worked was radiosurgery to the liver. Still years later,
no cancer where we treated in the liver. The only
place where there's no cancer in the body is in
(20:44):
the liver. So here's another patient, same day, a woman.
She's thirty eight years old, she's single, has no children.
She came with her mother and father, the loving family.
A year ago, she had abdominal pain. She went to
a community hospital. She was found to have colon cancer eight.
And you've probably read about it that cancer's occurring in
younger and younger people. So it used to be colon
(21:06):
cancer was thought to be diseased of older people. Here,
she's thirty eight with metastatic colon cancer has already traveled
to deliver. She had a biopsy, she had adenocarcinoma. She
went to the same super duper general hospital and she
started Fallfox chemotherapy, which is a common multi agent chemotherapy
commonly used for colon cancer. It was used forty years
(21:30):
ago when I was a medical on collegist giving chemo.
Do you know I'm a board certified medical on collegist,
treated many many patients at Harvard Medical School. Dana Farber,
she had Fallfox and then it didn't work, and they
changed it till fall Furry, and that didn't work, and
then they changed it back to Fallfax. We already know
when they're changing the treatment, they're changing it because it's
(21:52):
not working or not tolerated well. Then they gave a
second agent, faul Furry, and that didn't work, and then
they ran out of ideas, so they started giving her
the same chemotherapy that she had at the beginning, which
didn't work. So you already know she has stage four cancer.
And I've already told you a secret that is most
commonly the chemo after weeks or months stops working and
(22:16):
the cancer regrows. That's exactly what happened to her. She
was misled thinking that she's taking chemotherapy to be cured,
like about eighty percent of people have been reported in
certain cancers being told, oh, you take the chemo, you'll
be okay. Well, she's not okay. She had the same
agent given to her even though it didn't work. So
why would you give the same agent because you're out
(22:38):
of ideas. She had a cat scan, she never had
an MRI. She never had a pet scan. And you
probably heard from me about the best imaging. We like
to know exactly where the cancer is. Well, chemo doctors
often not always, but often just get simple imaging like
cat scans, even though there's better imaging to know where
all the cancer is. She never had an she never
(23:01):
had a pet scan. And she came to me with
abdominal pain and fatigue. She's losing weight. She has abdominal pain. Remember,
she has a colon cancer documented traveled to liver stage four.
She's been on so much chemotherapy that our menstruation has
already stopped. She had night sweats on the chemotherapy. She
(23:21):
had a cat scan showing cancer growing in the liver
and the lungs almost exactly like the other man. The
other man had a cancer started in the kidney. Here
cancer started in the colon. The tumor went from five
point five centimeters to six point five centimeters in segment
five and segment two it went from one point five
(23:41):
to one point nine. Periodic nodes were one centimeter. And
there's a tumor on the diaphragm two point two centimeters.
And there's a mass growing in the lung. Before it
was zero point eight. In a short period of time,
it grew to one centimeter. Same in the right lung
and lingula. Cancer is growing. She's getting chemotherapy. It's not working.
Speaker 8 (24:04):
She has metastatic biopsy proven adinalcarcinoma.
Speaker 7 (24:08):
And this is the work that we do every day.
I saw her about a week ago. We arranged for
a pet scan. She was never done in cancer markers.
And then she came back just yesterday and I examined her.
I spoke to her, I spoke to the family. Remember,
she's had a year of chemotherapy. Nothing's worked. And she
(24:31):
went back to Super Duper General and told her doctors, Hey,
I'm seeing doctor Liederman about radio surgery. Said, oh, don't
do that. Radiosurgery never works. Radiosurgery will hurt you. Radiosurgery
can't work. You gotta stay on chemotherapy for the rest
of your life.
Speaker 8 (24:47):
Neverber.
Speaker 7 (24:47):
This is the same thing. The same doctors at the
same place told my patient with kidney cancer never worked.
The only treatment that worked was radiosurgery to his liver.
And this is exactly the area that she she wants
to be treated. She's had no relief, the cancer's growing.
She had a year of chemo. Remember, a year of
chemo on average is one hundred to two hundred thousand
(25:09):
dollars a year. And the father says, oh, don't worry,
we don't pay. Well, we all pay. If you look
at average family costs of insurance, there's this in the
paper this week, the average cost of insurance between two
thousand and nine and now it's more than doubled. It's
twenty five thousand dollars a year for family. Why is
it because people like her father say, oh, we don't pay,
(25:31):
we all pay. All society pays. And that's why medical
cares have got out of control, because they're giving treatment
that's so costly and doesn't work, and they want to
give her chemo for the rest of their life, even
though they already know that the chemo doesn't work, and
they already are giving her a chemo that didn't work before,
they're giving it again. It just doesn't make any sense.
(25:54):
Or we have a treatment when we aim abeam at
the liver or the lung or the colon. We also
treat colon cancer as well. We have a whole list.
We can send you a booklet about a list of
the cancers that we treat when we aim the beam.
The difference between radiosurgery is when we treat a cancer
with radio surgery, there's a ninety percent chance the cancer
where we aim the beam stops or shrinks and never
(26:16):
grows back, versus with chemo. Essentially, for most all cancers,
not all, but most all, the cancer always grows back.
And she's seen that. She's seen that, and her doctor's
telling you, oh, it's so terrible and so this and that,
and she came her parents came to our office and
show everyone in the waiting room. No one's sick, no
one's vomiting, no one's bleeding, there's no ivs, there's no resuscitation.
(26:40):
Patients walk in. We have a stereotactic frame where the
first in New York. We've done this forty thousand times,
first in America, first in Western Hemisphere, more than anywhere else.
This is the work we do. And the doctor, the
chemo doctor at Super Duper General, said so many things
that weren't true, that it's so toxic, it doesn't work.
(27:01):
He has no understanding of radiosurgery none. And it's really
frightening when I speak about chemotherapy. I'm a board certified
chemo doctor. I'm a Board certified radiation doctor. I'm a
board certified internist. And this doctor who's advising her has
no training whatsoever in radiosurgery. And yet he's pushing her
(27:22):
away from a treatment that may well help her to
a treatment that has already proven not to help. And
he's in my mind, polluting her and her parents with falsehoods.
And sad to say, this is the work that we
do every day. It's why we're on the radio, why
print information, why we have videos, why we have DVDs
(27:42):
to educate, because there's so much lack of knowledge even
at Super Duper General. Like these two patients, both seen
at Super Duper General, both led astray with years of chemotherapy,
costly toxic. She's thirty eight years old getting a treatment
that doesn't work. It's really sad and sad for everyone
(28:04):
who's getting treatment that is not working. My name's doctor Liederman,
Board certified, Triple board certified, accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.
Here at thirty eighty four Broadway.
Speaker 8 (28:16):
Call us.
Speaker 7 (28:16):
If you want information, call us. If you want DVD
call us, if you want directions, call us, if you
want an appointment. If you're getting a treatment that's not
working or not wanted or not tolerated, it's probably time
to call doctor Liederman at two and two choices or
stop by. You're welcome to stop by your office, check
it out, get information, get DVDs, get booklets. And if
(28:38):
it's not for you, if it's for yourself or your
loved one, or your neighbor or your family or your friend, whoever,
come and get information and look at the information. And
if you ever got a restaurant or grocery store and
you hear people talking about cancer, you may want to
tap them on the shoulder and say, hey, I think
I know a treatment option that may be appealing for you.
(28:58):
That's generally well tolerate for you, that generally has high
success rate and is generally durable, unlike chemotherapy, and is
non invasive, non invasive, so it's totally different than surgery.
Totally different than chemotherapy. My name is doctor Liederman, thirtywo
y four Broadway Board certified. Here for you, We'll be
(29:18):
right back.
Speaker 11 (29:19):
It's Johnny Bragg's talking prostate cancer. Twenty years ago. I
came to doctor Liederman 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,
(29:40):
shared his and comparison results. I trusted doctor Liederman twenty
years ago. Today I trust doctor Liederman 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
(30:02):
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 (30:18):
It's doctor Leederman with Calvin West singing and writing about
his cancer treatment.
Speaker 12 (30:24):
I had cancer and my home was Asodo at the
radio serger that.
Speaker 4 (30:40):
Got choices.
Speaker 5 (30:43):
I'm so glad that we do.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
You want to thank doctor.
Speaker 4 (30:49):
Leaderman and you he'll get your cancer.
Speaker 12 (30:58):
It's my counting two three, Well up, pay.
Speaker 1 (31:07):
Your band that is.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
Such too free were cancer treatment called doctor Leederman two
and two choices, two and two choices, Call doctor Liederman.
Speaker 5 (31:16):
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour.
Speaker 6 (31:18):
This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at
the WR Studios in the hearts of New York City.
We're just a few steps from the Radio Surgery New
York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street.
Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively.
He was the first in New York with fractionated brain
radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in
(31:38):
the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery.
Speaker 5 (31:41):
You can also call doctor Liederman at two and two choices.
Speaker 6 (31:44):
For a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey doctor Liederman,
we're back.
Speaker 7 (31:48):
We're back and I want to tell you a little secret,
and that is that we're live, which means you can
call and ask all your questions from now till four o'clock.
Call us at one eight hundred and three two one
zero seven ten. One eight hundred three two one zero
seven ten. Call Noah. He'll put your call right through
and you'll hear your answer. A lot of times people say,
doctor Liederman, why don't you talk about I don't know,
(32:10):
skin cancer, brain cancers, or adreno cancers or whatever. And
we'll answer your question. So call us at one eight
hundred three two one zero seven ten. And I said earlier,
I want to introduce myself. I want to do that
for a minute. My name is doctor Gil Liederman. I
was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa. I went to
public school, university, Medical School, MD, Real doctor MD. There's
(32:34):
so many people talking on the radio. You don't know
what the heck or who they are. So many people
talking and giving advice.
Speaker 8 (32:39):
You know, Aunt and.
Speaker 7 (32:41):
Hilda had or uncle Harry had this, and this is
what he did. That's not scientific. It's not scientific. Maybe
it's reassuring, but it's not really scientific. So we talk
about diseases, we talk about years of studying. I've been
a student, I guess for sixty five years, learning, a
doctor for more than forty five years, and a triple
(33:04):
board certified radiation doctor. So I went to medical school
MD degree. After that, I went to University of Chicago
Michael Reese, turned internal medicine for years, board certified, took
care of thousands of patients with medical issues. Then went
to Harvard Medical School the prestigious Dana Farber trained in
medical and colleges, treated thousands of patients with cancer from
(33:27):
all over the world. Stayed on the staff. Then went
at Harvard Medical School to the Joint Center for Radiation Therapy,
trained in radiation oncology. And here I am the only
Harvard trained Board certified radiation doctor in.
Speaker 8 (33:42):
New York, one of the few in the world. Here
for you.
Speaker 7 (33:46):
Furthermore, if you're really lucky, you get to meet someone
else here Doctor Liederman, board certified doctor, a real Leaderman
who's also MD at twenty five. There's three Doctor Liederman's
MD at twenty five, Doctor ten Leaderman, my illustrious brother,
MD at twenty five, and doctor Ario Leaderman board certified
MD at twenty five. Went to the most prestigious hospitals
(34:10):
in the nation from Atlantic to Pacific, trained through thousands
of patients and now is practicing medical practicing excuse me,
radiation ecology here at Radio Surgery, New York. He's a
board certified cancer doctor, and patients are lucky to see
doctor Ario Leaderman. Board certified. It's a huge experience. He's
(34:32):
meticulous and thoughtful and caring and compulsive.
Speaker 8 (34:36):
This is the work he does. He's loved by the
patients and the patient's family and friends.
Speaker 7 (34:41):
And staff and others. So you're very lucky to see
doctor Ario Leaderman, board certified doctor here at Radio Surgery,
New York. Also, so to see him, just call us
at two and two choices and make an appointment. Two
and two choices, that's your lucky number. And we'll talk
about a man we just heard from two patients, Johnny Braggs,
(35:03):
who had prostate cancer twenty years ago. And he had
an father and a stepfather both with prostate cancer. As
a black man, and as I say in every show,
one in six black men get prostate cancer. It's an epidemic.
One in twenty three will die of prostate cancer. And
we say that to call attention of course we treat
(35:25):
men and women and children of any race and religion
and color and creed. But in the black community it's
a huge epidemic of prostate cancer. One and six Black
men get prostate cancer. One in twenty three will die
of prostate cancer. So of course we treat everyone who
needs treatment and wants to be treated.
Speaker 8 (35:44):
This is the work that we do at Ragistry in
New York.
Speaker 7 (35:47):
But it's to call your attention, and many people come
like Johnny Braggs came to me twenty years ago with
a terrible history. One father died after surgery. One suffered
relentlessly after surgery, and he came to me with an
aggressive cancer. We treated him twenty years ago and you
heard his testimony just a few minutes ago. Also, we
(36:09):
have a DVD about prostate cancer, and you're welcome to
call us to get that DVD. And you'll see many
men of all types of cancers of the prostate talking
about their experience here and elsewhere. So if you have
a prostate cancer like Johnny Bragg's or Calvin West, you
may want to call us get information. There's two hundred
(36:32):
thousand many year with prostate cancer in America and forty
thousand men a year die of prostate cancer, so prostate
cancer can be a vicious, vicious disease. Now we talk
about a man who came from Haiti with prostate cancer.
He's sixty five years old, he has five children, he
has diabetes, he has high blood pressure. You see by urologists.
(36:54):
His PSA was seven. He had a biopsy and well,
he had a gleas and eight cancer, So a high
risk cancer. PSA is a blood test prosthetic specific antigen.
It should be less than four. And as you'll watch
on our video, we have examples of men who had
prosta cancer with PSAs less than four. So it's not
(37:15):
protective for it doesn't mean anything necessarily. That's usually where
Americans start getting biopsies. He was seen by aurology at
a biopsy, had a gleason eight cancer, so he had
a high risk cancer and he understood when he came
here with gleason ate cancer. Success rate with radical surgery,
robotic surgery or open surgery is only about thirty percent,
(37:39):
whereas with us, the majority of the men we treat
with gleasinate cancer are successfully treated cancer free. So there's
a huge difference, and not all treatment for any disease
is the same. Not all treatment for prostate cancer is
the same. Not even though radiation is the same. So
there's different forms of treatment, different technical and different styles
(38:01):
of the doctor.
Speaker 8 (38:02):
And this is the work that we do every day.
Speaker 7 (38:05):
So he came to me seven years ago with a
gleas of eight cancer. He wanted our treatment only. He
had a nodular prostate so he had advanced stage t
to be prostate cancer.
Speaker 8 (38:17):
He chose our.
Speaker 7 (38:17):
Treatment, non invasive treatment, outpatient treatment, and years later his
PSA is now zero with no chemo, no hormones, no surgery.
This is the work we do at Radio SIRIT in
New York, even though he was a sixty five year
old man with diabetes and eye blood pressure and a
(38:39):
gleason ate cancer. Years later, his PSA is zero with
our treatment only. And a phone call this week at
a man I treated for prostate cancer. And usually after
our treatment, the PSA will go down to zero, may
take months or a couple of years, but usually keeps
on going down, down, down, And the man said he'd
been treated about six months ago and his PSA is
(39:01):
going down, down, down downtown And he said, oh, it's
just going down by itself. I said, no, it's not
going down by itself. It's going down because of the
treatment that you had here. Just like this man who
had a gleason ate cancer years ago. His PSA went
down to zero because his treatment that he had here.
(39:21):
Doesn't go down by itself. It's a result of the treatment.
And this is the work we do every day at
Radiosurgery New York. We'll talk about a woman who came
from Atlanta. She has metastatic sarcoma. She had a sarcoma
of the uterus. She had lung metastasis, stage four cancer.
(39:41):
She had her uterus removed and she had a scan
that showed cancer traveling to the lungs. She had systemic therapy.
It's another case where a wonderful woman, beautiful woman, the
nicest woman you can imagine, with the nicest mother, came
to me with stage four sarcoma and a huge mass,
a mass in the belly the size of a watermelon.
(40:04):
And she had surgery didn't work, she had chemo didn't work,
and she came to me because none of the other
treatments worked, and they will send her home to die.
Even though if you look at her. She looked like
she could be the missus America contest winner, and she
wanted to be treated, and we talked about all the options.
Even though it was a massive cancer size of a
(40:26):
watermelon in her belly, it was a Lyle Miles sarcoma.
I should tell you that sarcomas are cancers of the
connective tissue, like the muscle, the bone, the fat, tissues
like that, and this is the work we do. She
came earlier in the year and we treated her, and
now that cancer is in remission, and this is the
work we do. She has nodules. Remember she came to
(40:49):
us with this huge mass in the abdomen and pelvis,
which we treated us now in remission and cancer in
the lungs. She'd had chemotherapy elsewhere. Doctor said, oh, take
chemo goes everywhere. It's so fantastic. Well, we've known forty
years ago when I was giving chemotherapy that it wasn't
working very well, and it's still not working very well.
(41:10):
The only difference is the price now is so expensive
and so toxic, and it still doesn't work well. And
you can say, why are they giving her a treatment
that doesn't work?
Speaker 8 (41:19):
Why?
Speaker 7 (41:19):
Well, you could tell me guess why, Well, you can
decide that. But gave her a surgery didn't work, Chemo
didn't work, years of chemo, and she's absolutely against any
chemotherapy for sarcoma.
Speaker 8 (41:34):
She's tried it, it was toxic.
Speaker 7 (41:35):
She can't take it. She refuses that. We talked again.
I always talk about all the options. I like to
talk about all the options, and this is the work
that we do every day. We treated the huge mess
in the abdomen pelvis size a watermelon. It's now in remission,
and she wants us to treat the cancer and the lung.
This is the work we do every day at thirteen
(41:57):
D four Broadway, And of course some insurances you don't
have to have permission, but we always check with insurance.
We always have permission because there's no tricks here, there's
no games here. This is the work that we do
every day. And she's so grateful that she's finally had
a treatment for a sarcoma after years of chemo, after surgery,
(42:18):
none of which worked. Finally a treatment. As I said earlier,
we have a ninety percent success rate that's durable for
the rest of the life of the patient and This
is the work that we do every day at thirteen
eighty four Broadway with lots of information to give you booklets, DVDs,
radio shows. But of course if you have a particular question,
(42:40):
it's always best to meet in person for consultation. We
need to see the patient with medical records. We don't
do zoom and boom and gloom because there's too many mistakes.
It's best to meet in person.
Speaker 8 (42:54):
We insist on that.
Speaker 7 (42:55):
And this is the work we do every day for
new cancers or current cancers. Even if like her, you've
had surgery and chemo inter just didn't work. Are that
man with a cancer of the kidney that had surgery
and it went to the liver and long the only
treatment that worked was radiosurgery, just.
Speaker 8 (43:13):
Like this woman.
Speaker 7 (43:14):
This is why we are here every day on the
radio to educate and you can decide what you want.
It's a free country. You should decide, or at least
you couldn't say, hey, I learned from listening to doctor Liederman.
Speaker 8 (43:26):
I hope, I hope that's how you feel. Rhyme Linderman.
We'll be right back.
Speaker 11 (43:30):
Numbers mean much to me because of prostate cancer. I'm
Johnny Bragg's. The number two for my stepfather who died
of prostate cancer and my uncle who suffered so much
after prostate cancer surgery. The number fifteen fifteen years since
doctor Liederman's successful treatment of my prostate cancer. The number zero,
which is my PSA zero after doctor Liederman's successful prostate
(43:53):
cancer treatment. What every man wants The numbers one, two, three,
four important for every man with prostate cancer. One getting
the most successful treatment, two avoiding radical robotic surgery, three
keeping sexual function. Four maintain in urinary control. Call my
doctor Liderman two and two choices, two and two choices
(44:14):
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 one two choices. I'm glad I did. You'll
be number one with doctor Lederman.
Speaker 3 (44:31):
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
(44:56):
come to doctor Liederman to learn all prostate cancer options
from New York's own 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,
(45:19):
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
and two choices.
Speaker 5 (45:31):
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour.
Speaker 6 (45:33):
This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at
the WR studios in the Hearts of New York City
were just a few steps from the radio Surgery in
New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street.
Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer non invasively.
He was the first in New York with fractionated brain
radio surgery and he's the first in America and in
(45:53):
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 8 (46:04):
We are back.
Speaker 7 (46:04):
I want to talk about a very prominent lawyer. She's
eighty eight years old, still working, going to court every day.
She came to us with a basal cell cancer on
her nose was biopsy positive. It's the first skin cancer
of her life, and she just does not want part
of her nose removed for a basal cell carcinoma. She
(46:27):
was offered, encouraged to have what's called Moe's mohs Mo's surgery,
which is kind of an excavation of the nose or
the wherever the skin cancer is, and she refused. She
didn't want her face deformed. And her doctor, dermatologist, never
told her about other options. The dermatologists said, dermatologists is
(46:49):
a skin doctor.
Speaker 8 (46:49):
By the way, so do you have to.
Speaker 7 (46:51):
Have surgery mos surgery? And the patient said, what are
the options and the doctor told her none. But she
listened to this pro and she knew that we treat
thousands of skin cancers, and this is the work that
we do every day. She had had a uters moved
at one of the big hospitals years ago. Her mother
died of lung cancer. Her father also had lung cancer.
(47:13):
She's a litigator working at eighty eight, very spry, very thoughtful,
and she came to us with this mass on her nose,
right on the tip of the right nose, and she
just did not want to have her nose out of
her nose removed, and we treated her and now she
came back this week cancer free. Her nose is beautiful.
(47:36):
She's beautiful, she's thoughtful, she's carrying on all her normal activities.
At eighty eight she had treatment with no cutting, no bleeding.
She came in had a treatment which was done in minutes,
and now she is cancer free. And our success rate
in treating baso cell cancer or squamous cancer is about
ninety five percent where we aimed the beam, so it's
(47:59):
a high success no cutting, no bleeding, and we have
lots of experience over decades, lots of experience, and patients
find relief in all our experience. We have a booklet
to give you if you want about skin cancers. You'll
see a lot of difficult cases that we treat before
and after. So if you're interested in skin cancer, call
(48:21):
us to get a booklet, or stop by our office
at thirtyenty four Broadway, or if you have a skin
cancer or suspected skin cancer, come in thirtyenty four Broadway
call us man in doctor Leaderman. We accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid,
and most probably you will be very pleased with our work.
The vast majority of people are nothing's one hundred percent
(48:43):
in medicine, but we have a very high success rate
with no cutting and no bleeding for skin cancers. And remember,
so many skin cancers occur on the face and sun
exposed areas, so many around the ear and nose and
eyes and mouth and cheeks, also the hands and feet,
but anywhere in the body is susceptible. And this woman
(49:03):
came to us her doctor did not tell her. Sad
to say, doctor never told her about all the options.
Although we believe the doctor is morally obliged to tell
the patient, she learned by herself. That's why it's so important.
If you have a friend or neighbor who has a cancer,
you may want to pat him on the shoulder and
say Hey, you might want to call two and two
Choices and speak to doctor Liederman, thirteen eighty four Broadway.
(49:27):
What about a man. He's sixty nine years old. He
came to us from Panama. He's interested in procreation. He
came to us. He's divorced with no children. Came for
a checkup. He had pain in his palvis. He had
pain in his testicles, and we found his PSA was
three point six, which is normal, but on an exam
(49:48):
he had a big nodule in the prostate and we
arrange for a biopsy and had a Gleason eight cancer.
So Gleason eight cancer is a very risky cancer. The
scale of Gleason goes from two, which is the best,
to ten is the worst, and Gleason eight nine ten
are very risky. With Gleason eight nine ten success rate
(50:11):
with surgeries only a minority of patients. With us, it's
a majority. That's why so many men with prostate cancer
come to us. That's why he came to us, because
he had pain. You'urination. His doctors weren't helping him. We
examined him, examined his prostate, We got an MRI. He
had a MRI PI red five. There's usually numbers and
(50:32):
scales for everything. MRI is a magnetic test no radiation,
and for prostate it goes from one to five. Py
Red one to five one means most likely it's normal,
but we see cancer and people who have py red
one and pyrid five means almost certainly it's cancer. So
this man had a low PSA three point six but
(50:53):
a py red five Gleason eight and he wanted our treatment.
He understood with surgery, most likely his sex life would
be compute. With surgery open or robotic surgery for prostate cancer,
his urinary control would be compute and very likely he'd
be leaking urine with radical surgery. Just like a plumber,
(51:14):
for plumber cuts out part of a pipe, they have
to bring the ends together, which shortens the pipe. Same
with prostate If a surgeon cuts out the prostate, they
shorten the pipe, which turns out to be the penis.
So most men, if they know better, if they know
the data, want better results. They don't want to be shortened,
they don't want to have leak each they don't want
(51:34):
to be impotent, and that's why so many men come
here to try to get better results. This man came
to us years ago with a glease and eight T
three py red five prostate cancer and now years later
his PSA is zero. And this is the work that
we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway
(51:55):
in thirty eighth Street in the heart.
Speaker 8 (51:57):
Of New York City.
Speaker 7 (51:58):
We'll talk about a woman of sixty four years old.
She had a squamos carcinoma of the left tonsil. It
was traveled to the next so she had a big
mass in the neck. That's how she knew about the cancer.
And she had this mass. It was biopsied. It was
a squamous carcinoma. She had had a gunshot wound. She
was in a bad relationship, a very nice gentle lady,
(52:20):
but she had a bad boyfriend who shot her. He
shot her in the breast and the hip and had
a bullet in the hip. We had to get special
care to get an MRI of her, even though she
stills a bullet in the hip. She had tonsilectomy which
showed the squamous carcinoma P sixteen positive. She also has
a history of two strokes. Years ago. She's had two strokes.
(52:42):
She's an ex smoker and probably the smoking caused or
help cause the strokes and the throat cancer. And she
came to us with an advanced cancer in the tonsil
and the neck. It was biopsi at one of the
big hospitals in New York, and they tried to push
her to have surgery, to do radical surgery on her tonsil,
on her neck, and she just didn't want to. Cancers
(53:05):
to the head and neck area around the throat, the mouth,
the nasopharynx, and neck are called hat and neck cancers.
It's not the brain, brain cancers or something else. So
cancer the head and neck are often between the mouth
and the voice box. And this was a cancer the
tonsil that had traveled to the neck, squamous carcinoma. And
(53:25):
now after our treatment cancer free, we've got new imaging
of her. I examined her and this is the work
that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway,
and we see so many people who have cancers of
the head and neck or elsewhere who just do not
want to have radical surgery. And I saw a man
(53:48):
who works for the Mint, there's a mint at West Point,
and he came with Gleason six cancer stage T two
A year ago he had a Gleason six cancer. He waited,
he didn't do anything that progressed as you'd expect, and
now it's a glease In seven cancer. His PSA before
was three point nine, now it's eight point two. And
he came to us with a higher risk cancer because
(54:10):
his cancer had progressed from Gleason six to seven, and
now he wants our treatment. He doesn't want to wait
because he sees how aggressive the cancer is. For glease
In seven cancers, our success rate is ninety percent with
regular radiation or surgery, about sixty percent with not such
great quality of life with us. Most men keep their
sexual life in urinary life. My name's doctor Liederman. Call
(54:32):
us it two and two choices, two and two choices.
God bless you, and thank you and talk soon.
Speaker 6 (54:41):
Thanks for tuning in to the Radio Surgery Hour with
doctor Giliederman and myself. If you have questions before next
week's show, or want a free informative booklet and DVD,
just contact doctor Liederman at two on two choices. That's
two one two two four six four to two three seven.
That's two two four six four two three seven.
Speaker 2 (55:19):
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.
(55:42):
From head to toe cancer treatment with possibly a second
chance for you. Meet doctor Liderman to hit the cancer.
He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist.
Call two one two choices to one two choices to
meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare,
Medicaid accepted. Pre booklet DVD two super Convenient Broadway in
(56:05):
thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liederman to hit your cancer.
Called two one two choices, two one two choices.
Speaker 13 (56:11):
Did you know that you've got choices? That there can
be a bad way? Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor,
they don't mean today. You want to choicy is a
much bad way too? Want too choices? Conductor, they don't
(56:36):
means today. Did you know that you've got choices that
there can be a bad way.
Speaker 8 (56:48):
Did you know that.
Speaker 13 (56:50):
You've got choices? Conductor, They don't mean today to want
to choices A much better way to want two joy
says conductor.
Speaker 3 (57:04):
Leader mean today, Doctor Liederman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four, Broadway.
Speaker 1 (57:12):
The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed.