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November 12, 2023 • 57 mins
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(00:00):
The following is a paid podcast.iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an
endorsement of the products offered or theideas expressed for cancer treatment. Most prefer
effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman,
the radiosurgery Pioneer's goal too. DoctorLiederman is first in America, first in

(00:20):
New York, First for you withbody 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 fromhead to toe. Cancer treatment with possibly
a second chance for you even ifchemo, radiation or surgery didn't work or
isn't tolerated. Goals are your bestresults and quality of life. Meet doctor

(00:44):
Leaderman to hit the cancer. He'sNew York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified
radiation oncologist. Call two one twochoices to one, two choices to meet
doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted free
with DVD two super convenient Broadway inthirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman
to hit your cancer. Call twoone two choices, two one two choices.

(01:08):
It's Doctor Leaderman with Carrie Stubbs,who sings and writes about his cancer
treatment. Thirteen eighty foward Broadway andthirty eight. Cataplane hop a train don't
has a tap? Call two ontwo choices for an appointment, Mate,
so cancer can be said straight?My cancer it was twenty two centimeters.
Now I am cancer free. Nocutting, no bleeding, no hospital stay,

(01:32):
no chemo therapy. I'm grateful toDoc taleder Man at New York Radio
Surgery. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospitals. Day made me very
happy. Thirteen eighty four Broadway andthirty eight. If the address my cancer
had been set straight, called toon two choices for an appointment, Mate

(01:55):
the toleeder Men's top rights. Formore information about innovative cancer treatment, called
doctor Leederman two and two choices,two and two choices, thirteen eighty four
Broadway. Most insurance is accepted fornewer recurrent cancers. Call Doctor Leiderman two
and two choices. Welcome everybody.It's the Radio Surgery Show with Doctor Gil

(02:22):
Leiderman, MD, new York's onlyHarvard 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 courseanswering your questions. I'm Rob Redstone,
broadcasting from the WR Studios in theheart of New York City, and now

(02:45):
please welcome doctor Leaderman. Thank youRobin, thank you Noah, and thank
you for tuning in today and everyday, every day we learn together.
How does a cancer doctor and youlearn, Well, it's pretty simple.
Every day I go see patients andevery day I talk to them and examine

(03:06):
them and get tests on them.Some patients are there because they want to
know if they have cancer. Somepeople are there because they already know they
have cancer and how to want tohave the best possible knowledge to treat that
cancer. And then there's other patientswho have been treated elsewhere and the treatment's
not working, and they want tolearn about new options because it seems like

(03:29):
their doctors are well filled up withold options, old tired remedies, and
that just doesn't work. An example, Tay an example right now. We
had a woman born in Staten Island. She came to me yesterday and she
had ovarian cancer. And as soonas she was diagnosed, she went to
a souper duper so famous place andthey did radical surgery on her and chemotherapy,

(03:54):
and then with a short period oftime, the cancer came back,
said to say, came back.And that was a couple of years ago.
She was about forty seven at thattime. She's married, has a
loving husband, and several children.And well, the cancers come back again
and again, and every few monthsthey change treatment, they change chemo or

(04:16):
immunotherapy. And the last I askedthem how many different chemotherapies they had had
and the woman, the wife said, well, so many, you can't
believe it. And the husband couldn'texactly remember how many. And then on
the first page of the notes,I went, I took a history of
the patient. I went through allthe records, and I examined her.
Then we spoke about all the options. So she had told me what chemotherapy

(04:41):
they're going to give to her now, and I went through the records and
I said, but they've given youthe same chemotherapy before. Well, when
they give you the same chemotherapy beforeis now it means number one, why
did they quit the chemotherapy before?Because it wasn't working, So why are
they giving the same chemotherapy now thatwasn't working before. Well, it means

(05:03):
they're out of ideas, because ifthe cancer wasn't responding to the chemotherapy before,
it'd be highly unlikely but essentially impossible, for the cancer to go away
now. So why are they givingthe failed chemotherapy again. Well, obviously
they're out of ideas and they don'twant the person to walk away. And

(05:27):
so she and her husband are prettysmart cookies, and they decided to They
probably heard me on the radio ortheir friends, perhaps a radio listener like
you. Patted them on their shoulders, said hey, it's probably time you
go meet doctor Liederman. And theycame and I explained to them how chemotherapy,
the more chemotherapy you get, itoften causes the cancer cells to mutate

(05:49):
to become more resistant. And that'swhy the chemotherapy, maybe it works for
a few weeks or a couple ofmonths, and then it stops working.
Why, Because the cancer cells aresmart, they mutate. Because most chemo
therapies and emuale therapies have only onemechanism of action. It's like a magician

(06:09):
on the on the stage when theypull a rap it out of the hat.
They do the trick once, theydon't do it one hundred times,
because if you do it one hundredtimes, then you'll learn how they're doing
it, and you'll catch on andyou realize it's not magic. Well,
when the cancer doctor gives you thesame old treatment again and again and again,
whether it's chemo or surgery, andit doesn't work, it's highly unlikely

(06:31):
to work now. And so forthis woman, she finally understood, finally
after about two years of chemo.She had two years of chemo. Remember
the average chemo is ten or twentythousand dollars a month. It's one hundred
to two hundred thousand dollars a year. So at this super duper big hospital,
remember she had chemo with the radicalsurgery, there was probably one hundred

(06:54):
thousand dollars and two years more ofchemo. That's probably four hundred thousand dollars
half a million dollars of chemo,and the cancer's just coming back and back
and back. And she had acancer marker c A one twenty five that
was down to ten and now it'smore than one hundred. So there's every
indication pet scant physical exam symptoms,that the cancer's back, the chemo's not

(07:16):
working, and the doctor wants togive useless treatment. Why they're giving useless
treatment. I think it's just tofill the time because it's not going to
help her. And I explained thatvividly to the patient, that giving useless
treatment is useless. Well, it'suseless to the patient. It's not useless
to the hospital or the doctor orthe chemotherapy industry. They're getting paid,

(07:41):
but she's getting a treatment that hasessentially no chance of therapeutic benefit. And
so I met with him, Iexplained to them, and then late night,
I think it was two days ago, late night, maybe around midnight,
her husband sent me email, we'dlike to go ahead with your treatment.

(08:03):
Tell me something, doctor Liederman.Do people get resistant to radiosurgery?
And the answer in general is no. And the answer is explained this way
because, as I said a minuteago, chemotherapy, our immunotherapy works in
one way, so it's easy forthe cancer cells to become resistant to resistant,
to mutate it so that the chemoreminotherapydoesn't even work for a few weeks

(08:26):
or months. Before it worked fora few weeks or months now it won't
even work at all. It's awaste of time in my view, waste
of toxicity, waste of hope.And I said, because radiosurgery, our
method of treatment, sends in beams, precise beams to hit the cancer.
It attacks the cancer in billions andbillions of different ways, so many ways

(08:50):
that the cancer can't predict it,they can't mutate to it. And that's
why our treatment is so successful.Our success rate is a product ninety percent
where we attack the cancer and that'sfor the life of the patient, which
is totally different than chemotherapy. Chemotherapygenerally, I'm talking about stage four cancer,

(09:11):
which is what most chemos used forusually works if it works only for
a few weeks or months and thenthe cancer grows right back. Versus radiosurgery,
our treatment goes pinpoint to the cancerarea, not like putting your body
in a bath of a poison,which is what chemo is basically. Our
treatment, pinpoint treatment, non invasivetreatment, outpatient treatment with no cutting and

(09:35):
no bleeding, has a success rateof ninety percent, where we attack the
cancer for the rest of the lifeof the patient. So it's hugely different.
That's why so many people come here. That's why this woman came here,
and she didn't even know why shewas coming here to say that the
chemo she was getting wasn't working.She was getting sicker and sicker from it.

(09:56):
She had neuropathy, she had lowwhite coun the white blood cat was
not normal because the chemotherapy inmo therapywas poisoning the bone marrow. Her bone
marrow was sick and probably will neverrecover. So the body can only tolerate
so much poison. And while thepoison was harming her body, it wasn't

(10:18):
harming the cancer. Our treatment isexactly the opposite. We have lots of
information to send you. You cancall her office now or tonight or whenever,
a week from now or a yearfrom now. Our phone number,
which is easy to remember, istwo and two choices two and two two
four six forty two thirty seven.That's two and two two four six forty

(10:41):
two thirty seven. You can callus to get a package of information.
You can call us for an appointmentfor cancer questions and consultation. It's always
best to meet in person. Doctorsand patients have known that for hundreds of
years. It's always best to meetin person. Our information we send you

(11:03):
include DVDs and booklets and you'll learna lot by that. You also learn
a lot if you want to checkingour website which is rs NY dot org.
My name is doctor Liederman Radio Surgeryin New York, the first doctor
to perform radio surgery in the WesternHemisphere. Thousands of patients treated over decades,

(11:24):
non invasive, outpatient, highly successfulwhere we attack the cancer. This
is doctor Liederman. Check out ourwebsite, call us or better yet,
if you have a cancer question,just call us, make an appointment.
And one more thing I will tellyou, and that is that radio listeners
save lives. And how can yousave lives? Well, if you hear

(11:46):
a friend or a neighbor, aperson down the street with a cancer and
they're having trouble, they're not gettingbetter, they don't know what to do,
it's always best to come in.They might not be told maybe pushing
them to do surgery, or pushinghim like this lady for two years of
chemotherapy that hasn't worked, and thecancer is getting worse and worse and worse.

(12:09):
So radio listeners save lives. Youcan too, Just do what you
think is best and Meanwhile, keeplistening because you'll be learning a lot.
Every program is different, We talkabout every patient a different way. This
is doctor Liederman. We'll be rightback. Many people with cancer come to

(12:31):
doctor Liederman when surgery didn't help andtoxic chemo stopped working. Many come in
pain. Many people with cancer cometo doctor Liederman when their caregiver has no
more care to offer. Doctor Liedermanbringing innovative cancer care for decades. When
the next cancer drug is not aspromised, when surgery was to fail to
pass, we may be able tooffer you new cancer treatment options. We

(12:54):
treat new and recurrent cancers small orlarge, most anywhere the body, even
if prior chemo, radiation or surgerydidn't work. Call doctor Liederman two and
two choices, two and two choicesfor a free booklet DVD thirty eighth and
Broadway. Most insurances, Medicare,Medicaid accepted, Harvard Trained, Triple Board

(13:16):
certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices for innovative cancer
treatment. Best is to meet doctorLiederman in person. Call two and two
choices two one two choices. Radicalsurgeries deform beautiful bodies. Doctor Liederman treats
cancer noninvasively. Woman afraid to cancelmystectomy, afraid to offend doctors more than

(13:39):
deforming her own body. Woman losther face, vision, hearing and smell
by doctor she felt walked on water. Water is gone, cancer is back.
Woman lost her entire arm cancer relapsedwith vengeance. Here for second chance
after not wanting to wait minutes tosee doctor Liederman, a visit that might
have saved her arm and life stake. Cancer surgery elsewhere deforms, leaks,

(14:03):
impairs, shortens right. Moment tomeet doctor Liederman for cancer treatment is now.
Doctor Liderman might save your life.Doctor Liederman most experienced body radio surgery
accepts most insurances Medicare, Medicaid.Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth First
in America. Call doctor Liederman twoand two choices, two and two choices.

(14:24):
Call doctor Liederman two and two choices. Welcome back to the Radio Surgery
Hour. This is Rob Redstone herewith doctor Gil Leiderman at the WR Studios
in the hearts of New York City. For just a few steps from the
Radiosurgery in New York Cancer Treatment Centeron Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor
Liederman the leading cancer expert treats prostatecancer not invasively. He was the first

(14:46):
in New York with fractionated brain radiosurgery, and he's the first in America
and in the Western Hemisphere with bodyradio surgery. You can also call doctor
Liderman at two and two Choices fora free informative booklet and DVD. Hey,
doctor Leiderman, We're back. Weare back. I want talk about
a man. He actually sings asong on this radio show. And well,
if you get our prostate video,and you're welcome to come in to

(15:09):
get that or call us to getthat, you'll see him in his whole
story, and then you'll see himplaying the song about coming for cancer treatment
and most importantly being cancer free andhaving a great quality of life. He's
seventy three years old. He's ablack man, and I said that because
in the black community, one insix black men will get prostay cancer,

(15:33):
one in twenty three will die ofprostay cancer. This man was born in
Alabama. He came here. He'sretired, he's divorced, he has three
children. He has no family historyof prostay cancer, and a lot of
people think, oh, my familydoesn't have cancer. So I can't either.
Well, the fact is about ninetypercent of people with cancer have no

(15:54):
family history of cancer. This manhad no family history of cance answer.
His PSA went up to five pointnine. He got a biopsy. Multiple
cores showed gleas in seven cancer.So PSA was five point nine. Normals
considered four. But you could haveprostate cancer even less than four, and

(16:15):
I see that regularly. His Gleasonscorches aw. The cancer looks on the
microscope was seven. Gleason understood there'sdifferent kinds of cancer, and we explained
that to every patient and their lovedones. His was seven. The ranges
from two, which is the best, ten is the most aggressive. His
was more aggressive at seven. Hehas urination three times a night. He

(16:36):
was offered medicine, which at thebeginning he declined. He weighed two hundred
and fifteen pounds. He's a musician, like I said, he wrote a
song about treatment here and he goesaround the world singing. He's an ex
smoker. I examined him. Hehad a large prostate stage T one ce
Gleason seven. And he came tome five years ago, actually five and

(16:59):
a half years ago, and hejust did not want to have surgery.
He understood was surgery most likely tobe impotent, most likely he would be
leaking urine and have a shortening ofhis vital organ. He didn't want any
of that. He came here andhis PSA has been zero. In fact,
he was just here this week andit's still zero ever since our treatment.

(17:21):
Had our treatment only no chemo,no hormones. Lots of men come
to us because they feel like they'rebeing pushed elsewhere to get chemo or hormones,
which many men, probably most menjust don't want. I want to
talk about a woman, very remarkablewomen sixty three years old, born in

(17:41):
Honduras with endometrio cancer. Endometrios aLatin word, endo means the inside,
and metrio is a uterus. Ishe had a uterus cancer, the lining
of the uterus and elsewhere. Shehad radical surgery on her uterus and her
ovaries and they took out her ownmomentum at one of the big hospital super

(18:03):
pooper hospitals in the New York area. She had chemo and radiation and it
just didn't work. And we knowthat chemo doesn't work very well for dmetrio
uter's cancers can ask why do peopleget it? Why do doctors give it?
Well, I think I explained thata few minutes ago. So she
had surgery, chemo, standard radiation, and it just did not work.

(18:26):
She came to me four years agowith a mass in her pelvis and we
staged her up. We found thismass, we biopsied it, oh,
non invasively or minimally invasive with atiny little needle. So she had recurrent
stage four cancer, and the chemodoctors wanted to give her chemo for the
rest of her life. She justdidn't want that. She heard about us

(18:48):
actually through a radio listener like you. That's why I say you can save
lives. And years ago she cameto me actually with this advanced stage four
cancer, being told by her chemodoctors she have to have chemo for the
rest of her life. She askedher options. Well, a chemo doctor
didn't say, Hey, you couldhave chemo with me for the rest of

(19:10):
your life, or you might wantto see doctor Liederman, who could probably
do radiosurgery and save years of chemotherapy. Well, her doctor did not tell
her that kind of college just chemodoctor. No one told her that she
learned on her own. She cameto me. We staged her up,
we found the cancer, and wetreated the cancer only with radiosurgery, so

(19:32):
there was no poison going through herbody, or weeks and months and years
of treatment, only a few treatments. Pinpoint non invasive treatment with no cutting,
no bleeding. Walk in, geta treatment, walk out, go
for lunch, go to Macy's acrossthe street. And this is the work
we do. And it's now fouryears later, and she is cancer free.

(19:55):
In fact, she's been cancer freesince we treated her four years ago
for her advanced stage four uteris cancer. And so now you can see why
so many people come here. Theycome because they just don't want years of
useless chemo or toxicity or expense.She came, she trusted, reinformed about

(20:15):
all the options she'd already had,surgery and standard radiation and chemo. And
I should tell you that not allradiation, not all anything, is alike,
is like saying not all pianos arealike, or clocks are alike,
or cars are alike, or sweatersare like. We offer what I believe
is the most precise method, andwe're the first doctor Liederman, first in

(20:40):
the western hemisphere to perform radiosurgery.Rediserti is not surgery. It's a misnomer.
There's no surgery. It's to tryto use the radiation beam very precisely
like a surgeon would use her knife, but with us, there's no cutting,
no bleeding. And this woman's stagefour cancer relapsed after radical surgery and

(21:00):
radiation and chemo. Came here fouryears ago, treated and is now cancer
free. This is the work wedo every day. I want talk about
another woman. This woman came fromHaiti with an eight centimeter mass in her
breast, three centimeter mass in herexcela. So fifty four year old woman

(21:22):
from Haiti. She's married, shecame with her friend, has six children,
has high blood pressure, diabetes onmedication. She found a mass ten
years ago and she didn't do anythingabout it until five years ago, and
did this huge mass eight centimeters almostthe size of my fist, and three
centimeter mass in the armpit like aplumb. And she didn't want surgery,

(21:48):
she didn't want chemo, she didn'twant any treatment other than doctor Liederman.
Other doctors wanted to do mess deectomy on her and chemo on her,
and she just fused. She justdid not want to do that. And
well it's been now five years sinceher treatment. She's cancer free. She
gets mammograms and ultrasounds and physical examand blood tests, and one of the

(22:12):
radiologists just recently said, oh,let's do a biopsy and see what's going
on. Well they did a biopsycancer free. So not only can they
not see the mass, it's gone, it's gone by imaging, it's gone
by physical exam, it's gone byblood testing. And now even biopsy with
a tiny needle biopsy proven gone remissionfive years later after our treatment, only

(22:37):
for an eight centimeter mass. Andthis is the work that we do every
day. And in fact, wehave a new breast cancer booklet out and
a new DVD and you may wantto see that. If you have an
interest in breast cancer. I wantto see advanced sophisticated work. Just give
us a call. Two and twochoices Burton Digits is two and two two

(23:02):
four six forty two thirty seven twoand two two four six four two three
seven. I'll talk about a manwho came to me also years ago,
also was stage four cancer. Theman's sixty six years old. He's married.
He has a loving wife and hewas fine until about five years ago.

(23:22):
He had painted the knee and paintin the buttock area. He was
seen by orthopedic surgeons. They putsteroids in his buttocks and steroids in his
legs, and then he had anAMRII of the spine. It showed spinal
stenosis, and he was seen bya neurosurgeon who gave an epidural shot to
his spine and they did all thesetests and he had an MRII the pelvis

(23:45):
and finally, eventually he was foundto have a lung cancer and the lung
cancer traveled to his hip and hewas supposed to get chemotherapy for the rest
of his life for metastatic stage fourcancers. Is five years ago, he
was supposed to get chemo for therest of his life. Again, he

(24:07):
just did not want to have chemofor the rest of his life. And
the surgeons that he saw, hesaw multiple surgeons and chemotherapy doctors told him,
oh, he had to have chemo, there was no other choice.
And then he came here. Hecame to doctor Liederman thirteen eighty four Broadway,
and we talked about all the options. That's what we talk about to
every patient, talk about the risksand benefits and alternatives, all the options,

(24:32):
and sad to say, the chemodoctors never told him about the options.
The surgeon never told him about theoptions, and none of them said,
hey, instead of getting chemo,you could go see doctor Liederman and
think about other methods of treatment.Sad to say he didn't get informed by
his doctors, but happy to sayhe was informed by a friend. A

(24:52):
friend who listens to the radio,learns about his work, learns about our
work, and ted, hey,you might want to see leader him And
he came with his wife. Iremember the day five years ago, and
we talked about all the options,and he just did not want to have
chemotherapy. We treated him just afew treatments, make a body mold,
make a molder on the body.It's all open and painless and non claustrophobic.

(25:15):
It's easy, and we treated him. We mapped out his area of
cancer and send in beams directly wherethe cancer was and treated him. And
now five years later, he iscancer free, and he is happy,
and he is grateful. No othertreatment for five years, no chemo,

(25:37):
no surgery. And this is thework that we do every day at thirteen
eighty four Broadway. I want totell you a couple other secrets, one
of which is I said that wouldintroduce myself, and I want to do
that. Name is doctor Gil Liederman, born and raised in Waterlooaiowa. I
went to public schools, University MedicalSchool MD at twenty five, like my

(25:59):
brother Ted, doctor Ted Liederman MDat twenty five. And I should tell
you about my son Ariel Leaderman,MD at twenty five. There's three doctor
Liderman's, all mds at twenty five, real medical doctors. Aril trained and
worked at some of the major hospitalsacross America. He's here, he's board
certified. He's seeing patients with cancer. Patients who see him are lucky to

(26:25):
have a warm, caring, meticulous, thoughtful, understanding doctor, board certified.
Here every day seeing patients with cancer, newly diagnosed cancers, recurrent cancers,
and even people with symptoms worried aboutcancer like weight loss or masses or
bleeding or urinary issues, or menare wanting to get PSA's checking for prostate

(26:51):
cancers, or women wanting to getbreast evaluation or lung or prostate or bladder
this is the work that we doevery day. Is an expert board certified
here for you if you wish.And one more thing I want to tell
you is that we're live on theradio. That means you can call us
at one eight hundred three two onezero seven ten from now till six.

(27:15):
I get the numbers one eight hundredthree two one zero seven ten, one
eight hundred three two one zero seventen from now till six, and then
at midnight till five am, andthen tomorrow from eleven to twelve, noon,
from one to two and three tofour, and every night at midnight

(27:37):
on WOR I gut you could callit one eight hundred three to one zero
seven ten. Miname Sector Liederman.We'll be right back. When doctor Leederman
came to New York from Harvard,ninety seven percent of women in New York
were losing their breasts as breast cancertreatment. But ninety percent of doctor Liederman's
patients with breast cancer we're keeping theirbreasts. Doctor Liederman, an outspoken advocate

(27:59):
of breast saving therapy, educated womenabout choices to arm every woman about breast
cancer choices, breast saving whenever possibleand desired, When every hospital thought standard
radiation was okay. Doctor Leederman hada better idea innovative. Doctor Leederman first
brought brain radio surgery to New Yorkand body radio surgery to America. Meet

(28:21):
doctor Leederman, Breast conserving therapy overdecades. Thirteen eighty four, Broadway at
thirty eighth Call two on two choices, two and two choices about breast cancer
treatment. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaidaccepted. For a fresh second opinion,
called doctor Leederman. Breast cancer treatmentcalled two on two choices, two and

(28:41):
two choices. Call doctor Leederman today, two and two choices. It's doctor
Liederman with Calvin West singing and writingabout his cancer treatment. I had cancer
and Homeboda the radio surgery. Readthe choices. I'm so clod, wanna

(29:15):
thank Dot and you Elia Katz.It's like counting on two three wells up.
No more than is read your band. That is sub too free cancer

(29:37):
treatment called doctor Leederman. Two andtwo choices, two and two choices.
Call doctor Liederman. Welcome back tothe Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob
Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman atthe w o R studios in the Hearts
of New York City were just afew steps from the radio surgery New York
Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirtyeighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading

(29:57):
cancer expert, treats prostate cancer notinvasibly. He was the first in New
York with fractionated brain radio surgery,and he's the first in America and in
the Western Hemisphere with body radiosurgery.You can also call doctor Liederman at two
and two choices for a free informativebooklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman,
we're back, We are back.We'll talk about a man. He's

(30:18):
seventy three years old. He comesto me with a cancer of the penis.
He is married, he has nochildren. He has a very active
sexual life. He had an alesion on the penis and well. He
saw dermatologists who advised radical surgery.He saw a second dermatologist who advised radical

(30:41):
surgery. He went to a urologistwho advised radical surgery. I remember urologist
or surgeons. They operate on theurinary system. The dermatologists are surgeons who
operate on the skin. So hesaw three doctors, three surgeons, two
dermatologists, one surgeon. All wantedto do radical surgery MOSE surgery on his

(31:04):
penis. And this is a peniscancer on the left side. He'd had
it for some time, it wasgrowing, it was biopsied, and he
came to me because he was justupset about having radical surgery on his penis.
He said he had a very good, in active sexual life. He
wanted to keep it that way.He didn't want to have any deforming radical

(31:27):
surgery that would interfere with this qualityof life. And he came and he's
under treatment now doing great. Andthis is the work that we do.
Actually, if you see your skinCancer booklet, which is a new booklet
we produced unique, it's a uniqueone. You'll not see it anywhere else
in the world. You'll see it. Example actually on a big skin cancer

(31:51):
that went completely away. This wasa man who came to us from Miami,
Florida. For that reason. Theywanted to amputate his penis and he
just didn't want that. He cameto us and we were able to successfully
treat him years ago, and nowyears later he's cancer free. And this
is the work we do every dayat thirteen eighty four Broadway. This patient's

(32:14):
doing great. He's already responding evenafter only just a few treatments. This
is the work we do. IWe'll talk about a man who comes to
me now, well, ten yearslater, he came to us with a
mass in his chest wall. Sohe came with a mass in his chest

(32:36):
wall, the left end to yourchest. He found the mass. He
was biopsied. It was a schwanoma, cellular schwanoma, which is a tumor.
He saw thoracic surgeons. The chestwall is where the ribs are.
If you imagine where one's breast is, so right above the breast area hid
this mask growing out of the chestwall, under the skin. He saw

(33:00):
a surgeons. They wanted to doa radical surgery on him, cut out
that whole area of ribs and musclesand breast and skin and lung underneath it.
And he just didn't want that.His doctors did not tell him about
any options. And actually we haveone of the largest experiences in the world
treating shawan almas. The most commonside of shwan olmos, which is a

(33:24):
tumor of the nerves, is fromthe eighth nerve interferes with hearing and balance.
When I got started, most peoplewere having radical surgeon and were deformed,
were deaf, many people lost controlof their face. And now with
our treatment was a high quality oflife and high success. With us,
we use the lowest biologic dose andthat means better quality of life like hearing

(33:47):
and facial functionissensory all patients. Itold him about our experience, which was
extensive over decades. He chose tohave our treatments. Just a few treatments.
We made a custom and made stereotacticframe. It's open, it's custom
made for the patient. It holdsthe body in a precise position. We
computerized the area of his body.We computerized the cant and the tumor and

(34:13):
sending beams and just in a fewtreatments ten years ago, he's been tumor
free ever since, doing great.And he just had a new skin this
past week and he brought it intome this past week and still doing great,
and we would anticipate that he keepson doing actually better and better and

(34:34):
better. Usually radio surgery keeps onworking even after ten years. So for
him, it's great news. Hewas able to avoid deforming surgery and radical
surgery and all the complications you canimagine from looping your muscles and ribs and
rib cage, and how deforming thatwould have been, versus archy when he
walked in a few minutes, gota treatment, and then walked out,

(34:58):
had lunch, went to work,did all the things you wanted to do,
and now ten years later in remission, doing great music to anybody's ears.
This is the work we do everyday. And I want to tell
a little sad story. Actually,a seventy nine year old man. I
saw him eight years ago with prostatecancer, and he was an agricultural expert.

(35:24):
His PSA went from two to eight, so it almost tripled. He
had a biopsy, he had anMRI. They were planning to do standard
radiation. Excuse me, I wasplanning to do standard radiation. I explained
to him that not all radiation isthe same, and I showed him graphs.
I showed him charts. I showedhim how he'd have a fifty percent

(35:45):
better chance to be cancer free withus in half the time, half the
time, fifty percent better results,And sad to say, he went elsewhere.
The other doctor said, oh,it's all the same, we could
do the same as doctor Liederman.Well, they didn't do the same.
In fact, their treatment was totallydifferent. He now was very sad.

(36:07):
That's the first time I've seen himin eight years. He walked in very
sad because his cancer is now back. So even though he got forty five
treatments elsewhere, it didn't work.Not all treatment is the same. And
he asked if we can help him, and we're doing everything we can to
stage him up see if the canceris only in the prostate or if it's

(36:30):
elsewhere. So when you're diagnosed withcancer, you need to do two things.
Number one is to know what youhave and number two is where is
it? And of course you needto be informed about all the options.
And the other doctors just did nothelp him in that regard. So he
was a bit remorseful and sad whenhe came back. But we are doing

(36:50):
everything we can to help him.Even though he was misled and thought I
was told that all radiation is thesame, it is not. And we
talk about a man who comes fromHe's born in New York, he's seventy
three years old, he's married withthree children, and well, he had
a liver transplant for liver cancer yearsago and now has a basal cell cancer,

(37:15):
and well, it's right on hisright nose. Is dermatologist wants to
remove part of his right nose andhe just does not want Mo's mohs Mo's
surgery for a basal cell and toremove part of his right side of his
nose, which should be a bighunk of his nose and be pretty deforming.
He just does not want that.And well, I should tell you

(37:36):
by the way, he came tome a year ago and he is cancer
free. In fact, his noselooks great. He looks great. He
is so happy he did not haveradical Mo's surgery on his skin cancer.
We've treated thousands of skin cancers.We have information to send you if you

(37:59):
want. It's always has to meetin person. And I want to talk
about a man. It's very closeto me. It's very interesting. This
man came with his wife. Andactually not only did the man come with
his wife, but the man camewith his wife and his wife's father.
The wife married the best friend ofher father, and years ago, let

(38:24):
me see how many years ago thiswas, well, almost ten years ago.
They came to me. The threeof them came to me, the
wife, her husband, and herfather, all with aggressive cancers. That
is the men had aggressive prostate cancers, and well, he had a gleason
Ate cancer, and well, hewas seen at one of the super duper

(38:46):
hospitals and they wanted to cut onhim. And if you look at radical
surgery for gleason eight, success ratesonly about twenty percent, which means eighty
percent failure. And about ninety percentof the men have impotence and ability to
have erections or sexual intercourse. Abouteighty percent leak urine. And many men

(39:07):
have shortening of their penis. Andthis man married. He just wanted to
maintain his marital activities, even thoughit's at gleason Ate. He wanted to
have the best chance to be alivenumber one. And we showed him to
date and we show it to everyperson who comes here. Show it to
him and his daughter, his wife, and his wife's father, and they

(39:30):
all liked what they heard. Andboth men were treated. And this man
gleason Ate came in this week.His PSA is now zero point zero two,
so great results, doing great inremission. Nearly ten years after treatment

(39:50):
for an aggressive prostate cancer, gleasonAte with a good quality of life.
And I want a man another manstage four cancer treated him two years ago.
This is a fifty three year oldman born in New York City,
has two children. Came with afamily friend. He had colon cancer,
developed abdominal pain and bleeding. Hehad decreased appetite, he lost weight.

(40:15):
He went to the emergency room,went to one of the super big hospitals
in the five Girls, was seenby a doctor had a colostomy and it
would have given him chemotherapy. Andhe came to me and we found that
he had stage four cancer, thathis cancer traveled to the abdomen, and
they wanted to give him chemo forthe rest of his life. His usual

(40:38):
treatment for stage four cancer chemo orammunotherapy for the rest of his life.
He came here two years ago.We treated him to the mass that had
spread stage four cancer and just afew treatments with no chemo, no cutting,
no bleeding, no hospitals, noanesthesia. Only with radiosurgery, not

(41:00):
invasive treatment, pinpoint treatment which you'vedone thousands of times with a team of
experts to help you or your lovedones if you need helped him. And
now two years later, stage fourcancer only treated with radiosurgery and is cancer
free, doing great and is veryvery very very very very very very happy

(41:27):
and cancer free. You had physicalexams, We do imaging, we do
blood tests, and lots of peoplesay to me, doctor Liederman, but
I do what do you do aftertreatment? After treatment? We follow the
patient, We check up the patient. We want to make sure the patient
is fine, it's not hit andrun. Been a doctor for forty five
years. We see the patient andexplain all the options. If the patient

(41:51):
wants treatment or whatever they choose,they're always welcome to come back. We
encourage that it's always very important forthe patient. And this is the work
do every day. When I'm doafter Linderman, We'll be right back.
Numbers mean much to me because ofprostate cancer. I'm Johnny Bragg's. The
number two for my stepfather who diedof prostate cancer and my uncle who suffered

(42:13):
so much after prostate cancer surgery.The number fifteen fifteen years since doctor Leederman's
successful treatment of my prostate cancer.The number zero, which is my PSA
zero after doctor Liederman's successful prostate cancertreatment. What every man wants? The
numbers one, two, three,four important for every man with prostate cancer.

(42:34):
One getting the most successful treatment twoavoiding radical robotic surgery, three keeping
sexual functions, four maintaining urinary control. Call my doctor Leederman two and two
choices two and two choices to considerhis prostate cancer treatment for you. Most
insurances, Medicare and Medicaid accepted.Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Call

(42:55):
two on two choices for prostate cancertreatment. Called doctor Leader two and two
choices. I'm glad I did.You'll be number one with doctor Liederman.
It's doctor Liederman speaking with Lauren aboutlung cancer. You were seen by a
pulmonary doctor who was insistent that theyopen up your chest. Yes, absolutely,

(43:15):
and they sent you to the lungsurgeon and they were insistent on cutting
on you right absolutely, and wouldnot accept me as a patient if I
didn't do that. You're a nurse, you worked at some of the biggest
hospitals, and you just didn't wantyour lung on chest opened up and your
lung thrown into the garbage can rightthe bucket. Why Because at the super

(43:37):
duper prooper I saw what happened,and what did you see with doctor Liederman,
the team and the treatment. It'sperfect. You have the treatment and
that cancer's gone away, right ithas. What would you tell someone who's
got cancer make his first up DoctorLiederman. For more information called doctor Liederman
two and two choices, thirteen eightyfour broad We had thirty eighth We accept

(43:58):
most insurances, Medicare, Medica.Called two and two choices for more information.
Thousands treated over decades. Welcome backto the Radio Surgery Hour. This
is Rob Redstone here with doctor GilLeiderman at the WR Studios in the hearts
of New York City. Were justa few steps from the radiosurgery in New
York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway inthirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the

(44:19):
leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancernot invasively. He was the first in
New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and
in the Western Hemisphere with body radiosurgery. You can also call doctor Liderman
at two and two choices for afree informative booklet and DVD. Hey,
doctor Liederman, we're back. Weare back. This is doctor Leiderman.
I we'll talk about a woman who'sseventy six years old. She had a

(44:43):
cancer, skin cancer on the upperlip right between the lip and the nose.
It was biopsy positive basozo cancer.She came to me a year ago
and they were going to do radicalsurgery to remove her lip in her nose
and you would take a big patchof her face out and then patch it
up. That's called Moe's surgery.And she was sent by her dermatologists for

(45:07):
Moe's surgery and no one ever toldher about any options. It's a familiar
story this hour about surgeons and chemodoctors not telling their patients about other options.
Well, she trusted us number one, number two, she saw examples
of our work. Number three.She just wanted to have her nose and

(45:30):
lip removed and then patched up,and we treated her and she came in
this week for follow up doing greatin remission. This is the work we
do every day at thirteen eighty fourBroadway. We have booklet and DVD to
send you if you want, orwell, you can think about it,
or you can tell your friends whatever. There's three million Americans diagnosed with skin

(45:52):
cancer every year, so it's avery common disease, and many people with
skin can have more than one becauseusually not always, but usually it's fair
complexion and blue eyed and blonde hairedpeople are more the most prone to skin
cancers and some sun exposure. Usuallythe sun exposure occurs below the age of

(46:15):
eighteen years before, but the bodyremembers. So this woman was treated.
She's cancer free, her nose isfine, her lips are fine. She
is a okay and very very veryhappy. And I want to talk about
a woman who's sixty from Dominican Republic. She's Hispanic female, married with two

(46:36):
children. Came with her husband andshe also ten years ago a mass in
her armpit was biopsy to his lymphoma. She went to multiple doctors at some
of the biggest, most famous hospitals, actually three of the biggest most famous
hospitals in New York City, andeveryone wanted to give her a chemo kemo
keemo, keemo, keemo, kimokimo, and no one again told her

(46:58):
about the options. Another store,no one told her about the options.
Well, ten years ago, shecame to me. We talked about all
the options. We talked about doingnothing or chemo, or stomach therapy or
surgery, and she chose non invasiveradio surgery and we treated her ten years
ago and for ten years still shejust came this week cancer free. The

(47:22):
cancer is gone. She is fine. Never had surgery, never had chemo,
never had immunotherapy, only our outpatienttreatment with invisible beams. And now
that cancer is gone, and sheis so happy and doing great. And
this is the work that we doevery day at thirteen eighty four Broadway,

(47:46):
Broadway and thirty eighth Street in theheart of New York City. And I'm
talking about a woman who comes tous with breast cancer. She came five
years ago from Barbados, sixty sixyears old. She has fortune children,
she has diabetes. I had bloodpressure pain. She went to one of
the big hospitals in New York City. She had an ultrasounder the breast and

(48:07):
of the lymphodes. She had abiopsy showing cancer. She just did not
want to have deforming surder in thebreast. She didn't want to have mistectomy.
She chose our treatment years ago andhis cancer free. And of course

(48:28):
we get imaging and blood tests andphysical exam and she's still doing great,
and we expect her to do greatfor the rest of her life. But
we need to prove it. It'slike Ronald Reagan used to say, trust
but verify. So that's what wedo. Trust but verify, we prove
it. We get imaging and physicalexams and blood tests, and this is

(48:49):
the work we do every day atthirteen eighty four Broadway. And I got
to man another man with a reallyvery risky cancer. He came to me
five years ago. He's seventy nineyears old, he's single, no children.
He had heart surgery and high bloodpressure, and he had a Gleason
nine cancer, one of the mostaggressive cancers, four cores. Usually when

(49:15):
prostate biopsy, there's twelve little needlesto go in the prostate. Well,
he had four of those showing Gleasonnine. And there's two ways of getting
Gleason nine. I should tell you. Gleason was a doctor trying to give
us more information about prostate cancer.So he made a scale from two to
ten. In the old days,people get a biopsy and say, oh,
yeah, you have cancer. Well, Gleason understood that there's a better

(49:37):
way to determine the aggression of thecancer. And so it would take these
twelve biopses, and in each ofthese needles, he would take the dominant
and give it one number, andthe second dominant another number, and then
you add it up, so toget nine, it can either be four
plus five or five plus four,and five plus four is more aggressive because

(50:00):
the dominant one is a more aggressivecancer. And that's what he had Gleason
nine, And he interstedd with surgeryeighty percent chance the cancer would come back,
and with surgery ninety percent chance he'dbe impotent, and eighty percent chance
he'd be leaking urine and his oregonwould be shortened, and he just did
not want that. He came tome where he was one forty five,

(50:22):
five foot nine. He's been stabledfor years. His PSA was also high
at more than ten. Tod Gleasonnine PSA more than ten, and he
chose our treatment years ago and nowand ever since our treatment, actually his
PSA has been zero. He's doinggreat, he's fully intact, he does
everything he wants, and they cantell you he also is very, very

(50:45):
very happy because his PSA is zeropoint zero. He's doing great, and
he's very pleased with his treatment hereat Radiosurgery in New York. Avoiding prolonged
affording radical surgery, avoiding a receptionof his prostate and hospitals and all that

(51:07):
entails, and we'll talking about aseventy three year old woman born in New
York City who came to us witha skin cancer on her breast. So
most skin cancers we see her inthe face or ears or eyes, or
nose or mouth or sometimes the handsand feet is on the breast. And
they wanted to do surgery remove partof her breast, and she just did

(51:28):
not want that. Again, thesurgeons did not wish to tell her about
all the options, and she choseour treatment for a skin cancer on the
breast with no cutting, no bleeding, And this is the work we do
every day. She's years out fromthe treatment, doing great. It's almost
been eight years cancer free, doinggreat. And another patient born in Puerto

(51:52):
Rico, both he and his daughterhave cancer. He's got a prostate cancer.
His daughter had a breast cancer triplenegative and chose only our treatment.
She didn't want chemo, didn't wantsurgery, and then her dad got prostate
cancer. Gleason seven PSA seven pointseven staget one C. His samurais showed

(52:17):
involvement of the seminole vesicles and saidan advanced gleas in seven cancer semino vesicles
involved and a rise in the PSA. And I examined him a large prostate
POKI prostate, and he too wastreated five years ago and is doing great

(52:37):
cancer free. PSA is zero.And another man, this is a man
whose brother I was big friends withfor many many years, came from Czechoslovakia.
Had a basic cell cancer on theright nose. He did not want
to have surgery. Sad, sadto say he had prostate cancer. He

(53:00):
had cryo therapy which didn't work,and then he had surgery and he was
just upset about how it was left. And so he wants to have our
treatment, and in fact we treatedhim for this basal cell cancer. The
two most common types of cancer theskin are basal cell cancers and squamous cell

(53:22):
cancers. He had a basal cellcancer. He did not want his nose
to be deformed. He came hereoutpatient therapy, a few treatments and is
doing great cancer free. This isthe work we do every day at thirteen
eighty four Broadway Maams. Doctor Liederman, I should tell you that we see

(53:44):
new cancers, newly diagnosed for peoplewho want to know all the options before
they get into a rut. Wesee people with cancers that were previously diagnosed
and treated and their treatment is notwanted or not tolerated or not good for
them. And we see people whohave a suspicion of cancer, US men
checking out PSAs, or women withbreast lumps. This is the work we

(54:07):
do every day. We accept mostinsurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We're super
convenient located in Manhattan at thirty eighthin Broadway, right by Macy's in Times
Square. There's buses, trained sabwoyscoming to us. Also along out of
the railroad Amtrak, all very closeto our office. Thanks for tuning in

(54:30):
to the Radio Surgery Hour with doctorGil Riderman and myself. If you have
questions before next week's show or wanta free informative booklet and DVD, just
contact doctor Liederman at two one twochoices. That's two one two two four
six four two three seven. That'stwo one two two four six four two

(54:52):
three seven for cancer treatment, mostprefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated
outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman,the radio surgery Pioneer's goal too. Doctor

(55:15):
Liederman is first in America, firstin New York, First for you with
body radiosurgery. Doctor Liederman hits yourcancer with no cutting, no bleeding.
Doctor Liederman has decades of experience withprimary and metastatic large or small cancers from
head to toe cancer treatment with possiblya second chance for you. Meet doctor

(55:35):
Leaderman to hit the cancer. He'sNew York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified
radiation oncologist. Call two one twochoices, two one two choices to meet
doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted.
Free booklet DVD two super Convenient Broadwayin thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet
doctor Liederman to hit your cancer.Call two one two choices, two one

(55:59):
two choices. Did you know thatyou've got choices? That there can be
a bad way? Did you knowthat you've got choices? Conductor, they
don't mean today. You want tochoices is a much bad way to want

(56:22):
too choices? Conductor, THEA domean today? Did you know that you've
got choices? That there can bea bad way? Did you know that
you've got choices? Conductor, theydon't mean today to want to choices is

(56:46):
a much bad way to want toochoices? Conductor, Leader mean today.
The proceeding was a paid podcast,iHeartRadio's host of this podcast constitutes neither an
endorsement of the products offered or theideas expressed.
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