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November 26, 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

(00:40):
tolerated. Goals are your best resultsand quality of life. Meet doctor Leaderman
to hit the cancer. He's NewYork's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation
oncologist. Call two one two choices, two one two choices to meet doctor
Liderman for a fresh second opinion.Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted free with
DVD two super convenient Broadway in thirtyeighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to

(01:04):
hit your cancer. Call two onetwo choices, two one two choices.
It's doctor Leaderman with Carrie Stubbs,who sings and writes about his cancer treatment.
Thirteen eighty foward Broadway and thirty eight. Cataplane hop a train, don't
has a taate? Call two ontwo choices for an appointment, Mate,
so cancer can be said straight?My cancer it was twenty two centimeters.

(01:26):
Now I am cancer free. Nocutting, no bleeding, no hospital stay,
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

(01:51):
had been set straight, called toon two choices for an appointment, Mate
the toleeder Men's top rights. Formore information about innovative cancer treatment, called
doctor Leaderman two and two choices,two and two choices, thirteen eighty four
Broadway. Most insurance is accepted fornewer recurrent cancers. Call Doctor Leaderman 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 youRob, and thank you Noah, and
thank you for tuning in today andevery day. We're on the radio every
day. Why to educate so youcan learn the about what's going on with
your neighbors and friends and maybe evenyou. And maybe if God forbid you

(03:06):
or loved one have a cancer andyou're shocked and don't know what to do,
maybe you'll think back to this momentabout us talking about options, options
for the treatment of cancer. AndI can tell you for most cancer there
are options. Now I know.It seems to me, and I meet
with patients every day, it seemsto me that most doctors not really doctors,

(03:31):
meaning educating the patient as to whatall the options are. It seems
like they're more like salesmen or saleswomenselling what they have. Sad to say,
it's like you go to a departmentstore and you have purple ties and
someone's trying to sell you a purpletie. It seems like sometimes if you're
a surgeon, you're being pushed tohave surgery, or if there's a chemo

(03:54):
doctors pushing for chemo and etc.Etc. Etc. Here, we don't
do that. We just don't dothat. You'll see multiple pieces of art
and we talk about the art ofradio surgery all the time. And if
you come to our office and you'reinvited to do that, you can see
the artwork of radiosurgery, and youcan see the options, and we talk

(04:15):
about all the options from local andregional's systemic and all the forms of each
and combination treatments and even no treatment. And that's why it's so important and
why so many people come here fora fresh second opinion. Some people come
when nothing's working and they're in bigtrouble. We're going to give you some

(04:36):
examples of that in a few minutes. Some people come when they're just diagnosed
with cancer because they want to learnall the options first. And some people
come because they're fearful of having cancerand they want to get checked out.
Either they have symptoms bleeding or painor weight loss, lumps, change in
their body that are unexplained. Somepeople are like that, and then there's

(04:58):
some people just want to get checkedout, Like a man wants to know
what his PSA is. He wantsto know if he's at high risk for
prostate cancer, if he has prostaycancer. A woman wants to get checked
out for whatever, breast cancer.And people come for checking other bowels and
body and checking to see if there'sa cancer. And so there's really three
reasons why people come and see doctorLiederman getting checked out. Number two just

(05:21):
diagnosed with cancer maybe elsewhere. Andyou want to know what all the options
are before you get into your rut. It's the famous physician named Ussler in
Boston, and he said, onceyou're in a rut, you should choose
well before you get into the rut, because once you get in your rut
of treatment, it's really hard toget out of the rut, and some

(05:42):
treatments are irreparable. I remember adoctor I took care of and he sad
to say, I went to oneof the super pooper big hospitals for sarcoma,
and the doctors never told him theoption. They told him he had
to have his leg cut off.And this doctor, physician, you'd think
no better, but no, that'snot really the case. Had his entire

(06:03):
leg from the hip to his toecut off, and he was so sad
and he asked me, doctor,what are you thinking? When I saw
him the first time, I said, I'm really so sad. I'm so
sad for you. I'm so sadthat your doctor did not tell you all
the options. Your doctor could havesaid, hey, I can cut off

(06:24):
your leg, or you can gosee doctor Liederman and learn about non invasive
options. And sad to say thatdoctor patient and the doctor, doctor,
the doctor's doctor, no one toldhim all the options until it was too
late. And then he came tome. He came to me when he'd

(06:44):
already lost his leg. And thatwas a sad, sad, sad event.
So that's the reasons people come here. We're at thirteen to eighty four
Broadway. When i'm doctor Liederman.You can always call us to get information
or package of information. You cancall to get an appointment. It's always
best to meet in person. Ifyou have a medical question, it's always
best to meet in person. Youhave much better care and a much better

(07:08):
answer. And that's why I reallyinsist on meeting in person for medical issues.
We do accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We're super conveniently located
in the heart of New York Cityat thirteen eighty four Broadway, Broadway and
thirty eighth Street, in the heartof New York City, and it's so
easy to get to us by saboys, trains, buses. All the trains

(07:30):
come into New York City through PennStation, Grand Central Station or just blocks
away. And of course airports havetransportation right to the Manhattan I was thinking
about what to talk about today andI actually want to talk about a group
of patients. Usually talk about onepatient at a time, and today I
want to talk about a group ofpatients. Why do I do that?
Well, Number one, there's threemillion skin cancers a year in America,

(07:56):
three million every year, so youcan imagine most of us knows somebody with
skin cancer. I remember a womanthirty years old, forty years ago,
had skin cancer and they wanted toremove part of her nose. He told
oh, it's much better to dosurgery, and they cut off the end
of her nose. And I stillknow her forty years later, without her

(08:16):
nose, without the tip of hernose, and I have other friends and
neighbors, and I've been studying skincancers for decades. I worked with one
of the most famous doctors in Bostonand one of my family members was a
dermatologist. So we had lots ofconversations over the dinner table and about patients
and sharing patients over decades, andwe talk about skin cancers because so many

(08:43):
people are left in the lurch.As I said a few minutes ago,
it's so often that patients are told, Oh, you have to have this,
or you have to have that.And I see so many people with
skin cancer and they're all told basicallythe same thing. You have to have
mos you have to have mo's andwhat iss mohs? Most well, it's
a radical surgery. It's going inand excavating part of your body where the

(09:07):
cancer isn't around that and it couldbe pretty deforming. You can imagine if
you have a cancer the ear orcheek or eye or eyelid or nose or
mouth or arm or leg, radicalsurgery will remove part of your body and
you'll never have that part of yourbody again. They can sew it up
or patch it up, but it'snever what God gave you, and it's

(09:30):
often very deforming. I see somany people who are missing part of their
nose or part of their eye,or I saw one man who actually a
few men gone blind not from thecancer, but from the surgery, having
had a cancer around the eyelid,and they went to super pooper big hospitals,
had radical surgery, lost their eyebecause you need eyelids to function,

(09:54):
to keep the eye moist, andif you don't have eyelids at work,
the eye dies and the person goesblind. So you'll see examples. If
you get our skin cancer booklet,and we have lots of information about skin
cancer booklets and DVDs, you're welcometo come in and request it in person,

(10:15):
and many people do and that wayyou get actually many more booklets and
DVDs in person. Or you cancall us to one two choices to one
to choices. That's two one twotwo four six four two three seven.
So I want to talk about thisgroup of patients. Why a group,

(10:37):
because you can get an idea ofwhat's going on with all these cancer So
I want to start and we talkabout a woman first of all, sixty
years old, tractive woman. Shetakes care of herself. This beautiful woman,
and she has a cancer right inthe medial portion of the left eyelid,
right where the left eyelid meet thenose, right by the tear duck

(11:01):
the eyelid and the nose. Andshe had a biopsy proven skin cancer there.
And all these skin cancers I'm talkingabout today are squay miss cells and
basal cell cancers. And this womanhad a skin cancer and her doctor wanted
to do radical surgery on that partof her eye lid and dear duck and

(11:22):
nose, and you can imagine,to do that means that she would never
look the same because she'd be losingpart of the eyelid, the medio portion
that's the inside portion next to thenose, and part of her nose also,
and part of the tear duck.So it'd be a very deforming surgery
for a very small cancer, butin a location that means that it'd be

(11:48):
very deforming. And lucky for her, a radio listener like you told her,
Hey, before you get deformed formose radical surgery for your skin cancer,
you might want to see Doc Liderman. And indeed she came and we
saw her and we offered treatment justin a few treatments, so it's so
different than mos moses cutting and usuallydeforming. Our treatment doesn't even touch the

(12:15):
body physically, only with invisible rays, and we're able to find the cancer
and send in rays from thousands ofangles to hit the cancer with a high
success rate. Our success rate isabout ninety five percent, and the treatment
is painless, non invasive, andgoes by quickly. Just in the few

(12:37):
sessions the cancer most commonly goes awaystays away. Our success rate is about
ninety five percent. So this womanwith a cancer and the medial portion of
her eyelid where the eyelid hits thenose and a tear duct which would have
been super deforming surgery had she hadmos now is in remission doing great with

(13:00):
our work only no cutting, nobleeding, no chemo, no anesthesia,
no plastic surgery, no big bills. This is the work we do every
day. And I have a fewmore patients. I'd like to talk to
you about skin cancer. First,we're going to take a break. We'll
be right back. Many people withcancer come to doctor Liederman when surgery didn't

(13:22):
help and toxic chemo stopped working.Many come in pain. Many people with
cancer come to doctor Liederman when theircaregiver has no more care to offer.
Doctor Liederman bringing innovative cancer care fordecades. When the next cancer drug is
not as promised, when surgery wasto fail to pass, we may be
able to offer you new cancer treatmentoptions. We treat new and recurrent cancers

(13:46):
small or large, most anywhere inthe body, even if prior chemo,
radiation or surgery didn't work. Calldoctor Liederman two and two choices two and
two choices for a free booklet DVDthirty eighth and Broadway. Most insurances,
Medicare, Medicaid accepted, Harvard trained, Triple Board certified Doctor Liederman two and

(14:07):
two choices two one two choices forinnovative cancer treatment. Best is to meet
doctor Liederman in person. Call twoand two choices two one two choices.
Radical surgeries deform beautiful bodies. DoctorLiederman treats cancer noninvasively. Woman afraid to
cancel mystectomy. Afraid to offend doctorsmore than deforming her own body. Woman

(14:30):
lost her face, vision, hearingand smell by doctor. She felt walked
on water. Water is gone,cancer is back. Woman lost her entire
arm cancer relapsed with vengeance. Herefor second chance after not wanting to wait
minutes to see doctor Liederman, avisit that might have saved her arm and
life. Prostate cancer surgery elsewhere deforms, leaks, impairs, shortens. Right

(14:54):
moment to meet doctor Liederman for cancertreatment is now Doctor Liederman might save your
life. Or Liederman most experienced bodyradio surgery accepts most insurances, Medicare,
Medicaid, thirteen eighty four Broadway atthirty eighth First in America. Call doctor
Liederman two and two choices, twoand two choices. Call doctor Liederman two

(15:15):
and two choices. Welcome back tothe Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob
Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman atthe WR Studios in the hearts of New
York City. For just a fewsteps from the Radio Surgery in New York
Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirtyeighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading
cancer expert, treats prostate cancer notinvasively. He was the first in New

(15:35):
York with fractionated brain radio surgery,and he's the first in America and in
the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liderman at
two and two choices for a freeinformative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor
Leiderman, we're back. We're back. I just want to take a moment
to talk about that woman that Italked about on that AD, the woman
that had a huge sarcoma of herarm. Or sarcoma is a cancer connective

(16:00):
tissues the bone, the muscle ofthe fat attendance, She had a huge
sarcoma. She was gonna see me, but she didn't want to wait five
minutes, and so she didn't seeme, and said she went to some
of the biggest cancer hospitals of Americaand Utah and Texas and elsewhere, and
everyone told her, oh, shehad to have surgery. They had to

(16:21):
amputate her arm. And instead ofcoming to doctor Liederman, she decided to
have her arm amputated. And beforeit was amputated, her whole arm from
her shoulder down to her hand.The whole arm was amputated. Beautiful woman,
nice woman, about a seventy yearold woman from New Jersey. And
she had the treatment, the surgery, and before the surgery, she turned

(16:45):
to one of the doctors and said, well, what happens if the cancer
comes back now and he told her, well, you're a goner. You're
a goner. And she remembers itvividly that before she lost her arm,
she kind of gave up her arm, thinking if she loses her arm,
she'll save her life. Her doctortold her, she comes back, she's
a goner. She lost her armat one of the biggest super duper pooper

(17:10):
cancer places in America, and thenshe comes back to me. Why does
she come back to me, Well, she comes back to me because she
has a huge mask like a basketballon her right shoulder where her arm used
to be. The cancer returned rightat the same spot where they did the
surgery. They cut off her arm. So sad to say, they threw

(17:33):
her arm, you know where.She never will have that arm again.
She wears clothes kind of to hidethat she's lost her arm, but she
has this huge mass, huge masksin his shoulder. She's shopped around.
She remembered doctor Liederman from a visitthat never took place, and she decided

(17:55):
to hear about radiosurgery, and wesat down. I met with her and
her family, loving family, caringfamily, and we examined her. We
staged d her up to make surethe cancer out and traveled. We always
liked to know where is the cancerand what kind of cancer it is.
Those are two important questions, whatit is and where is it? And

(18:15):
we stayed drew up, and Iguess lucky for her, the only place
was in her shoulder, and itwas a huge cancer, huge massive cancer.
And we offered innovative treatment for herradiosurgery, no chemo, no bleeding,
no cutting, no hospital, nosurgery, no anesthesia, only invisible
beams to attack this vicious, massivecancer. And she came for the treatments,

(18:41):
had a few treatments, tolerated themwell, walked in. We made
a molder on the body, Wecomputerized her body, We sent in thousands
of beams from thousands of angles hitthe cancer. And now she just came
back. And she came back andshe has a new scan of her body,
and she has lots of good news. Number one of which there is

(19:02):
no spread of the cancer anywhere else. Number one and just within weeks for
the first time. Remember, she'shad all kinds of treatment at the biggest
cancer hospitals, not in New York, but across America, and none of
the treatment worked. Systemic therapy didn'twork, surgery didn't work. Nothing worked
until she came to doctor Liederman andwe offered treatment. We talked about all

(19:26):
the options, we talked about ourexperience, and we probably have the largest
experience treating sarcomas. Why because usualtreatment just doesn't work. Surgery so often
fails, Chemo most commonly fails.Chemo doesn't cure most cancers, and chemo
certainly doesn't cure metastatic stage four sarcomas. And you can say, well,

(19:48):
why did doctors give it when itdoesn't work? Well, you can imagine
the answer to that one. Soshe came back to me weeks after treatment,
and already the cancer has shrunk.It's shrunk in volume by forty percent,
just in weeks, dramatic shrinkage ofthe cancer, meaning the cancer's dad.
It's shriveling up, going away,and most likely we'll keep on going

(20:12):
away for the rest of her life. And this is the work we do.
And I can tell you that sheand her daughter and her family are
so happy. And you know what, so am I to offer a treatment
that works most commonly our treatment works. It's a beautiful thing when we're confronting
cancer and people wanting help to havea treatment and experience a massive experience,

(20:36):
the largest experience performing radio surgery inthe Western hemisphere. Why well, we're
first first to perform radio surgery.When all the other doctors were doing standard
chemo and surgery and radiation. Onedoctor stood up and say, hey,
there's a better way. And ofcourse most doctors, sad to say,
in most hospitals denounced doctor Liederman.They forgive them for they know not what

(20:59):
they do, because they just didnot understand that by focusing in and hitting
the cancer and not hitting the healthytissue is so much better for the patient.
And it means we can give higherdoses, more effective doses to hit
the cancer. And that's the workthat we do every day at thirteen eighty

(21:22):
for Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, and that's why so many people ask
for our package information. Check outour website. Our website is RSNY dot
org, rs Y dot org.Rs and Y, by the way,
stands for Radiosurgerynew York dot org.And many people come in and they want

(21:44):
an appointment to see what options existfor them. I want to talk about
the next few moments about skin cancers, where we left off, so I
talked about the woman with the cancerof the skin right in the medial portion
of the left eye. I wentabout a sixty five year old stockbroker or
a super successful stockbroker, comes inwith most elegant clothes and shoes, and

(22:07):
everything's elegant except for this massive canceron the top of his head. He
has a red, raised, irregular, ugly mass on the top of his
head and his scalp and it's allcancer. Who's been seen by surgeons and
most surgeons and they want to removehis scalp. It's a little bit like
some of the Native Indians in Americadoing a scalp surgery. Well, this

(22:32):
is Moe's scalp surgery, which wouldhave been most likely very deforming. There's
no extra scalp skin, so itmeans a patch would be put in there.
And he just did not want todo radical surgery on his scalp and
plastic surgeries and procedures when there wasnon invasive, highly successful treatment available.
And this is a man who comesfor his treatment in the most good humor.

(22:56):
He's almost done with the treatment andthe cancer's already going away, and
he is also very very happy nowI'm talking about a man who's eighty years
old. I've treated him for severalskin cancers in the past, and I
can tell you that many people whohave one skin cancer often get others.
And this man is fed up withMoe's surgery, doesn't want it. He's

(23:18):
had our treatment before with high success, with disappearance of the cancer where we've
treated him mainly in the face area. And now he has a large irrosive
mass in the left cheek, largemass. It's bleeding, fongating, and
we're treating him and he's also goingin remission. He's just about done with
treatment, doing how he walks in. His family brings him in from South

(23:42):
New Jersey, gets a treatment inminutes and turns around and heads home.
And he's in remission doing great already. And then I want to talk about
a sixty year old man. Andit turns out that his best friend is
the urologist that I've worked with throughthe last forty years. And well,

(24:03):
one thing led to another thing.He said, hey, do you know
I said, sure, I workwith dot over forty years. Well,
he's my best friend. His wifeand my wife were best friends, and
that's how we met and so hecame with a cancer on the tip of
his nose, on the left sideof his nose, eating through the nose,
and there's a big hole in hisnose where the cancer ate through the

(24:27):
nose. And he also was sentfor surgery, most surgery by dermatologists.
That seems like what dermatologists loved todo, and for reasons you can imagine.
And so he just did not wantto do radical surgery and lose part
of his nose and walk around witheveryone looking at his nose that wasn't there
anymore. And he too has comeand he too's in remission, doing well

(24:49):
and nearly done with the treatment.Walks in, gets a treatment and heads
home. A couple of days ago, he head out and had drinks and
dinner with one of my colleagues I'veworked with over forty years. And the
last person I want to talk aboutskin cancer is a man who's also about
sixty and he's very athletic. He'strim, he runs every day. He's

(25:12):
active and in perfect shape, perfectcondition, perfect weight, perfect posture.
And he ends up having a squamouscancer on his penis, Yes, a
squamous cancer on the penis, andhe was seen by dermatologists who did a
biopsy and found to have a squamouscancer on a penis. And he was

(25:33):
seen by a second dermatologist post bythe way were women dermatologists, and the
second dermatogist at, oh, youhave to have Moe's surgery, Moe's radical
surgery, which is removing a prettybig hunk of a penis, and this
man just did not like what heheard. He then went to a eurologist.
Remember eurologist. A dermatologist is asurgeon who operates on the skin.

(25:59):
A derm is Latin meaning skin anologists. It means one who studies.
Eurologists, well, euro means theurinary system ologists, one who studies urinary
system All three were surgeons, andthe eurologists also recommended radical surgery on his
penis to remove that part of hispenis. And this man in sixty,

(26:21):
he's very active and he's very sexuallyactive, did not want to have radical
surgery to remove that part of hispenis and have a graph or a flap
or a part of his penis missing. And he heard about our innovative treatment
for cancers and skin cancers and othercancers and primary cancers. But it's like
cancers and he chose to be treatedand he's now also going through treatment and

(26:45):
his cancers also pretty much disappeared underour treatment. And I see him every
day that he comes in and he'svery happy about the treatment. No side
effects, no bleeding, no cutting, no sur no deformity. And this
is the work that we do everyday at thirteen eighty for Broadway. We

(27:07):
have lots of information about skin cancerto send you if you want. We
have lots of experience over forty years, four decades with thousands of patients treated.
We accept most insurances, Medicare,Medicaid. It's easy to get to
us if you have a question abouta skin cancer or just don't know what
to do, or don't know abouta bump that may be changing or changing

(27:32):
color, changing shape, may beraised, maybe bleeding, a scab that
doesn't heal on your skin. Youmay want to make an appointment at Radiosurgery
New York Doctor Liederman at thirteen eightyfour Broadway, where we accept most insurances,
Medicare, Medicaid. This is thework that we do every day.
We have information to share with youor to send you. You're welcome to

(27:55):
come into our office as many peopledo or always best is to meet in
person. This is the work wedo every day with thousands of patients over
decades, with high success, nocutting, no bleeding. This is what
makes our patients generally very happy,and also our staff and doctors all devoted

(28:18):
to this facial project. My namedoctor Liederman. We'll be right back.
When doctor Leederman came to New Yorkfrom Harvard, ninety seven percent of women
in New York were losing their breastsas breast cancer treatment. But ninety percent
of doctor Liederman's patients with breast cancerwe're keeping their breasts. Doctor Liederman,
an outspoken advocate of breast saving therapy, educated women about choices to arm every

(28:41):
woman about breast cancer choices, breastsaving whenever possible and desired. When every
hospital thought standard radiation was okay,doctor Leederman had a better idea innovative Doctor
Leederman first bought brain radio surgery toNew York and body radio surgery to America.
Meet doctor Lee. Breast conserving therapyover decades. Thirteen eighty four Broadway

(29:03):
at thirty eighth, Call two ontwo choices, two and two choices about
breast cancer treatment. Most insurances,Medicare, Medicaid accepted for a fresh second
opinion called doctor Leederman. Breast cancertreatment called two and two choices, two
and 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

(29:32):
and my home was USDA at theradio sarger reader choices. I'm so glad
that we do. You want tothank Dot Lead and you Elia Katzer.

(30:03):
It's not count in two two three, Well up, no your band that
is so too. Free cancer treatmentcalled doctor Leederman. Two and two choices,
two and two choices, Call doctorLiederman. Welcome back to the Radio
Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstonehere with doctor Gil Leiderman at the w

(30:26):
R studios in the hearts of NewYork City. Were just a few steps
from the Radio Surgery New York CancerTreatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street.
Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively.
He was the first in New Yorkwith fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's
the first in America and in theWestern Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You

(30:47):
can also call doctor Liederman at twoand two Choices for a free informative booklet
and DVD. Hey doctor Liederman,we're back, We're back. And that
was Calvin. Calvin is a patientof mine and he asked to make to
write a song and sing a songand record a song, and he did
it. And it's a beautiful songabout his prostate cancer. If you want

(31:10):
to hear the song, I havea copy of that. You can come
in and ask for our Prostate DVD. And he's featured there. There's an
interview with Calvin. I'm talking toCalvin about his history and what happened to
him and his prostate cancer and hisrisky prostate cancer that was treated years ago
and his PSA is now zero.And there's a man who makes music,

(31:33):
beautiful music, and he has gigsin New York and Europe and Asia.
He travels the world and he justmakes the most beautiful music and he's the
most beautiful man you can imagine.And yeah, I love this man.
He's fantastic. He's so wholesome andthoughtful and caring and creative and talented.

(31:53):
He is fantastic. So if youlike his music, there's no charge.
You can come and get AVD ofhim and see him singing and performing,
and it's beautiful, really beautiful.And when I stopped for a moment and
just introduce myself a bit, myname is doctor Gil Liederman. I was
born and raised in WATERLOOAIO. WhenI'm telling you this because there's so many

(32:14):
people on the radio and in lifethat really they're not doctors, but to
give advice. Even in a lotof medical offices now, a lot of
doctors don't see their patients anymore.They hire substitutes that are not MD's.
And well, we don't do thathere at Radio Surgery in New York.
Here you get a real MD.And it's so different. Also on the

(32:37):
radio, there so many of peoplegive me advice that are not mds.
He may be shocked, and someof people are so shocked. I look
at the paper. I say,you know that person he saw it wasn't
a doctor. Said what I said, Yeah, look here he was say
whatever, blah blah blah. Sohere you get a real MD. And
I'm going to tell you about mejust for a moment, so you know
who's talking, so you have someidea of who's on the other side.

(32:59):
Of this our computer or smartphone orwherever you're listening, and you can listen,
by the way, on your smartphoneor computer, and people listen to
this program around the world. Peoplecome here from around the world. Why
well, you kind of heard manyexamples so far, and we're going to
talk about more examples. I wasborn and raised in Waterloo, Iowa.

(33:20):
I went to public school, University, Medical School, MD at twenty five
real doctor MD at twenty five,like my brother Ted, doctor Ted Liederman
MD at twenty five, and likedoctor Ariel Leaderman, Aaril Leaderman MD at
twenty five three doctor Leaderman's all mdsat twenty five. Dariel Leaderman is a

(33:42):
fantastic doctor, Board certified cancer doctorhere at thirteen eighty four Broadway, loved
by his patients and their families andtheir staff because he's so caring and diligent
and thoughtful and compulsive. He takescare of patents in the best possible way,
and patients are lucky to have ArielLiederman as their doctor if they wish,

(34:07):
Board certified, trained at some ofthe biggest facilities in America and now
here at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadwayin thirty eighth Street. I after MDA
twenty five, went to University ofChicago Michael Reies, trained in internal medicine
three years, took care of thousandsof patients with medical conditions, Board certified,

(34:29):
then went on to Harvard Medical School, trained at the prestigious Dana Farber
Cancer Institute years. Took care ofthousands of patients and also was on the
staff at Dana Farber Cancer Institute.And then also at Harvard Medical School studied
and trained at the Joint Center forEdition Therapy for years. Took care of

(34:49):
thousands of patients and became Board certifiedin radiation cancer work. And I was
alluding to actually some of the skincancer work earlier in the program. So
triple Board certified. The only Harvardtrained Triple Board certified radiation cancer doctor New
York, one of the few inthe world. Here for you accepting most

(35:12):
insurances, Medicare, Medicaid, hereevery day at thirteen eighty four Broadway.
It's always best if you have amedical question or concern, just make an
appointment and make a date and cancall us at two two Choices and we'll
meet and talk about what your issuesare and how to get you better if
there needs to be an improvement.Some my names doctor Liederman, and I

(35:36):
want to talk about another patient.I've talked about four or five skin cancer
patients today, and I did thatbecause I want to get a sense of
the types of skin cancers that wetreat all over the body, and you
have a sense of that. Wetalked about cancer the eye, and cheek,
and nose and even the penis,all with high success. And this

(35:57):
is the work that we do everyday. I'm talking about and I saw
yesterday a lovely man came with hiswife and son in law, seventy year
old man. He had a retailbusiness and then earlier this year he got
sick. He got abdominal pain andstarted losing weight, and he went to
one of the biggest super pooper hospitals. Who's found to have a pancreas cancer.

(36:19):
He had a cat scan, hemet a surgeon. It's kind of
like, just like I say,you have a cancer problem, go to
the emergency room. They called downthe surgeon and before you know it,
you're in the operating room. Well, that's exactly what happened to this man.
Exactly what happened. He did notsee any other cancer doctors who not
come for a second opinion. Hedidn't even get a PET scan. He

(36:42):
did not get the most accurate,most delicate, most sensitive test. Why.
I guess maybe the surgeon in thehospital or just in a hurry to
do that surgery. In it sooften people are in a hurry to do
something that's just not in the patient'sinterest. Maybe it's great for the surgeon
or the hospital or whatever, buta patient before something radical like surgery should

(37:09):
know the options and should know wherethe cancer is and you'd know if even
surgery is appropriate. And that wasnever done, even though this patient went
to a super duper big place,and when I first met him, he
was so proud to tell me thename of this super duper place, and
after a few minutes, I thinkhe felt differently. Why because he had

(37:30):
this surgery what's called a whipple whipplwhipple surgery on his pancreas. Remember,
the surgeon went in without any PETscan, without any best knowledge of where
the cancer is, and sad tosay, they opened them up and they
did that surgery. Even though thecancer traveled to the lymph nodes, the

(37:52):
cancer traveled to the ampula of vaderfar away from the pancreas. It traveled
into the common bial duck and invadedthe bile duck. It traveled into the
duodenum. It traveled with them.The dwarden was part of the intestine.
It invaded into the dowardenum and theadjacent tissues. And still the surgeon did
the surgery, probably not even knowingwhere all the cancer was because he doesn't

(38:15):
have X ray eyes. He didn'tdo a pet scan, he didn't do
the best studies, and the cancerwas in lymphotes too, multiple lymphotes,
and they closed him up. Whenhe started as a cancer marker for pancreas
cancer, his CAA nineteen nine wasmore than three hundred, and it never
got better. It never got better, and they started them on chemo,

(38:37):
and he couldn't tolerate the chemo.He got so sick and he got terrible
infections, and they gave him morechemo, and he got sick and got
more infections and more chemo, andgot more sick and more infections. And
now the CAA nineteen nine, whichwas three hundred when he started, never
got better, and now it's sevenththousand, eight hundred and more it's gone

(39:02):
from three hundred to seventy eight hundred. Remember these are market tests. These
are tests to tell you what's happeningto the cancer. And I don't think
his doctors explained very well what theCAA ninety nine means in this case.
He got surgery, didn't get better, he got chemo, didn't get better.
It's just going higher and higher andhigher. And now in one month

(39:27):
it's more than doubled to seven thousand, eight hundred. And still he's never
at a PET scan. And what'sthe doctor going to do with this super
duper big hospital. What are theygoing to do. They're going to give
him the same chemo that he couldn'ttolerate before. They're going to give him
the same chemo they got him sosick. He got a super infection from

(39:51):
the chemo, and he was sosick and it didn't work. And now
they're going to give him the samechemo again that didn't work. Does that
make sense? Remember the average chemocosts ten or twenty thousand dollars a month,
so it's a financial cost. There'sa cost on the body. And
meanwhile he's lost lots of weight andhe's weak and ask him, have you

(40:13):
ever got back to your normal feelingafter that surgery? And the answer was
no, He never got back.He was working before surgery. He quit
work. He's losing weight. They'regiving him the treatment that doesn't work,
and he must have some inkling thatsomething's wrong, because he called up doctor
Liederman two and two choices and madea date. And yesterday we spent a

(40:36):
lot of time together and answered allhis questions and his wife's questions and in
son in law questions about what Ithink. And I think that giving a
treatment that doesn't work makes no sense. Giving a treatment that is toxic makes
no sense, Giving a treatment thatcaused a superinfection makes no sense. Giving

(40:57):
a treatment that doesn't work the cancerkeeps on growing makes no sense. And
yet at the super duper big hospital, that's what they're doing, sad to
say. And that's why so manysmart people with cancer or suspected cancer make
a date at thirteen eighty four Broadwayto get a fresh second opinion. That's

(41:21):
what he did, sad to say, nine months late. But at least
he made an apployment before his chemowas supposed to start in thirty six hours.
Will we have that chemo. Idon't think so will have radio surgery
for his recurrent cancer when surgery didn'twork and chemo didn't work, well,

(41:43):
it's about the best chance he hasto slow down the cancer. We talked
about all the options. We talkedabout local, regional, systemic combination,
even though treatment. We talked aboutall the options like we do for everyone,
and we let every patient and theirlove ones make the decision. We
never push anybody into a treatment.We always believe it's best to educate and

(42:06):
inform and for this man, forthe first time in nine months since he
went to the hospital with abdominal painand weight loss, for the first time,
he now understands what happened to him, Why the surgery failed because they
did no adequate imaging, why thechemo failed, and why they are out
of ideas to give a treatment.A chemo that didn't work before is not

(42:29):
going to work now. Just doesnot make sense. This is the work
we do every day to help educateand inform the patient and loved ones.
We're at thirteen eighty four Broadway.My name is doctor Liederman. We accept
most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.It's easy to get to us. We're
close to Penn Station and Grand Centfor all the trains that come in to

(42:50):
New York City. We're close tothe subway lines one, two, three,
four, five, six, ACEand QR BD, FM, seven,
S and Q. We're close toall the bosses in New York City
coming to Midtown, and it's easyto find us. Just called two and
two choices my name doctor Liederman.We'll be right back. Numbers mean much
to me because of prostate cancer.I'm Johnny Bragg's. The number two for

(43:15):
my stepfather who died of prostate cancerand my uncle who suffered so much after
prostate cancer surgery. The number fifteenfifteen years since doctor Liederman's successful treatment of
my prostate cancer. The number zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor
Liederman's successful prostate cancer treatment. Whatevery man wants? The numbers one,

(43:36):
two, three, four important forevery man with prostate cancer. One getting
the most successful treatment, two avoidingradical robotic surgery, three keeping sexual function,
four maintaining urinary control. Call mydoctor Leederman two and two choices two
and two choices to consider his prostatecancer treatment for you. Most insurances Medicare,

(43:58):
Medicaid, accepted. Thirteen eighty four, Broadway at thirty eighth called two
and two choices for prostate cancer treatment. Called doctor Liederman two and two choices.
I'm glad I did. You'll benumber one with doctor Leederman. It's
doctor Liederman speaking with Lauren about lungcancer. You were seen by a pulmonary
doctor who was insistent that they openup your chest. Yes, absolutely,

(44:21):
and they sent you to the lungsurgeon and they were insistent on cutting on
you right absolutely, and would notaccept me hesitation if I didn't do that.
You're a nurse, you worked atsome of the biggest hospitals, and
you just didn't want your lung onchest opened up and your lung thrown into
the garbage can right the bucket.Why Because at the super duper prooper I

(44:44):
saw what happened, and what didyou see with doctor Liederman, the team
and the treatment. It's perfect.You have the treatment and that cancer's gone
away, right it has. Whatwould you tell someone who's got cancer make
your first up Doctor Liederman For moreinformation called doctor leader Erman two and two
choices. Thirteen eighty four Broadway hadthirty eighth. We accept most insurances Medicare

(45:05):
Medicaid called two and two Choices formore information. Thousands treated over decades.
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor
Gil Liederman at the WR Studios inthe hearts of New York City for just
a few steps from the radio surgeryin New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway
in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate

(45:28):
cancer not invasively. He was thefirst in New York with fractionated brain radio
surgery, and he's the first inAmerica and in the Western Hemisphere with body
radio surgery. You can also calldoctor Liderman at two and two Choices for
a free informative booklet and DVD.Hey doctor Liederman, we're back. We
are back, and I want totalk a lot of gentlemen. Seventy years
old, married, he lives inNew York City as a girlfriend for I

(45:52):
don't know what thirty years. Andhe was diagnosed with prostate cancer glease and
seven PSA eight and he decided thiswas years ago. He decided he wants
the chairman of a big eurology departmentto operate on him. He wanted to
have radical surgery. He wanted tohave the chairman the the big Hancho and

(46:14):
one of the big hospitals operate onhim. That's all he wanted. And
he went to the Big Hansho,one of the big hospitals, and they
did surgery and his prostate cancer andthen disaster struck. Disaster struck. How
did it strike? Well, hehad radical surgery. He had a wound
on his bottom. The wound brokeopen. He started losing urine through the

(46:36):
wound on his bottom while he's inthe hospital. He's the hospital, he's
for weeks and weeks and weeks andweeks, and his urine has never come
back. So it took weeks forthe wound to close because the urine was
falling through the wound. It's mostunbelievable. And he was left impotent.

(46:57):
He was left incontinent. He's actuallystill can't urinate. He's got a tube
in. He has to put atube in his penis four times a day
to empty his bladder. So hissex life is gone, his urinary life
is gone, his penis is shortened. And this is now ten years later,
ten years later, So that's whatthree thousand and six hundred days and

(47:19):
he puts the catheter in four timesa day. That's like fourteen thousand times
he's put a catheter into his bladder. And then the cancer started coming back.
He had after surgery, He hadblood cloths from the surgery. He
had infection. He had to sitin a bedpan because the urn was coming
throughout all of his bottom, notjust urinating through his penis, but all

(47:44):
of his bottom. He was ina bedpan because was leaking through his skin.
Wow, his directions were gone.He had strictures in the urethra.
He had multiple procedures to fix thestrictures, but he still can't urinate.
And then injury to insult his PSAstarted rising. Now one secret, another

(48:05):
secret of this show when a personhas surgery for prostate cancer and I do
not advocate it because it's so devastatingme. Most men just don't understand how
devastating is for so many men.Maybe not for all men, but for
the vast majority men. It's devastating. Again, if you want to hear
more about it, you should watchour DVD and you'll see some patients who

(48:28):
had surgery in the so called BestHands in America and you can hear from
the men themselves what happened. Sothis man who was left impotent and continently
can yurn, unable to urinate thecatheter four times a day, and then
his PSA started rising. And remember, after surgery, the PSA should be
zero because you're not supposed to haveany prostate or cancer. So not only

(48:51):
did the surgery fail so miserably,but then his PSA started rising and he
came here ten years ago. Tenyears ago, he came with a rising
PSA and we talked about all theoptions, We staged them up, We
checked his whole body to make surethere was not any spread of the cancer.
And this is the work that wedo every day at thirteen eighty for

(49:14):
Broadway of lots of information to sendabout prostate cancer and a lot of information
you can pick up here if youwant. And we offered treatment because thank
god, there's a salvage treatment formen who have prostate surgery that doesn't work,
and it fails so often. Sothis is so important to think about

(49:36):
what to do if you chose surgeryand the PSA is going up. If
your PSA is not zero points zero, it's time to call doctor Liederman two
and two choices and make a dateas soon as possible to come in and
we can talk about options for youto get checked out, to see where
the cancer is and talk about treatmentto try to give you a second chance

(50:00):
to be cancer free. And Ican tell you this man went through hell
with surgery by the chairman of thesuper big hospital. He went through hell
and going through hell every day.Imagine putting a catheter in the penis four
times every day for ten years stillto day. And the only good news
is he came to Radio Sir toNew York Doctor Liederman. We treated him

(50:22):
for surgical failure and now he's inremission with a PSA of zero point zero.
And I can tell you he's sothankful and so grateful. And this
is the work that we do everyday at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in
thirty eighth Street in the heart ofNew York City. Now I'm talking about

(50:43):
a woman who's seventy seven years old. She has one daughter, and she
came to us with multifocal breast cancer. She was diagnosed six years ago.
She had high blood pressure. Shewas seen by a doctor. Doctor found
a mass in the breast, sentthe patient for mammogram and a biopsy.
The super Pooper hospital shed a biopsyshowing multifocal cancer, invasive cancer. She

(51:07):
went and went to a even biggerhospital, shod An Amriah the breast and
she was found to have a thirdmassive cancer in the breast. And well,
she just did not want to haveany surgery, no surgery, no
lumpectomy, no mistectomy, no chemotherapy. And she came six years ago and

(51:28):
she chose to have our treatment forbreast cancer with no surgery, no chemo,
no cutting, no mistectomy, nolumpectomy. And now six years later,
she is cancer free. And thisis the work that we do every
day at thirteen eighty four Broadway,Broadway through the eighth Street in the heart

(51:52):
of New York City. And we'retalking about a woman who comes to us.
She's forty seven years old. Shehas two children, she gave with
her family friend. She was diagnosedwith breast cancer. And three and a
half years ago and again one ofthe biggest hospitals in the right breast,
she had an ultrasound, she hada biopsy and no treatment. She said,

(52:15):
no treatment. She has a hugemass destroying the breast eating through the
skin, bleeding, loss of substanceto the breast with an open wound,
the skin's damage is bleeding. Theskin is red and thickened, the nipple
is distorted, and this is howshe presented to us. She lost fifty

(52:37):
pounds. Her weight went from twotwenty two to one hundred and seventy pounds.
I examined her and she had twocentimeter xillary nodes in the armpit on
the right side. The right breastwas foreshortened and malodorous, with a crusty
wound and bleeding. There was distortion. The mass itself was seventeen centimeters like

(52:59):
a melon on her breast. Thebreast was hard and swollen. And this
is how she presented to us,and she insisted wanted our treatment. She's
been seen at some of the biggesthospitals in New York City. She's declined
surgery, chemo, any other treatment. She waited three and a half years
to meet and now she started thetreatment and already the cancer is going away.

(53:23):
This is the work we do everyday at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway,
in thirty eighth Street, in theheart of New York City. This
is the work we do. Andwe talk about a woman who presents with
a mass on the base of herneck, three centimeter rock hard mass,
seventy eight years old, born inJamaica, and we see many people from

(53:45):
the Caribbean. There's much cancer there. And she'd been seen by multiple doctors,
no answer. She's had this massand paining for two years. She
finally came here, like many peoplecome to get answers about their body.
We saw her, we have valuedher with a tiny little needle. We
diagnose lymphoma, and she has alymphoma just to the neck with a very

(54:07):
high success with our treatment. Wehave an extensive experience with most kinds of
cancers from the head to the toe. We've spoken about some of them today
and every day on the radio wespeak about new patients and different patients,
so you get a sense of thework we do. If God forbid you
or a loved one have a cancer, you may wish to consider coming for

(54:28):
a fresh second opinion. Radiostrit Toin New York, where we accept most
insurances Medicare, Medicaid thirteen to eightyfour Broadway. My name's doctor Liederman,
God bless you, Thank you somuch and talk to you soon. Thanks
for tuning in to the Radio SurgeryHour with doctor Gil Riderman and myself.
If you have questions before next week'sshow or want a free informative booklet and

(54:52):
DVD, just contact doctor Liederman attwo one two choices. That's two one
two two four six four to twothree seven. That's two one two two
four six four two three seven.For cancer treatment, most prefer effective,

(55:23):
non invasive, well tolerated, outpatienttherapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio
surgery Pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liedermanis first in America, first in New
York, First for you with bodyradiosurgery. Doctor Liederman hits your cancer with
no cutting, no bleeding. DoctorLiederman has decades of experience with primary and
metastatic large or small cancers from headto toe cancer treatment with possibly a second

(55:47):
chance for you. Meet doctor Leadermanto hit the cancer. He's New York's
only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiationoncologist. Call two one two choices to
one two choices to meet doctor Leaderfor a fresh second opinion. Most insurances
Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Free bookletDVD two super convenient Broadway in thirty eighth

(56:07):
in Manhattan, meet doctor Liederman tohit your cancer called two one two choices,
two one two choices. Did youknow that you've got choices? That
there can be a bad way?Did you know that you've got choices?

(56:27):
Conductor, they don't mean today.To want to choic is a much bad
way too, want too choices?Conductor, they don't means today. Did
you know that you've got choices thatthere can be a bad way? Did

(56:51):
you know that you've got choices?Conductor, they don't mean today you want
to choices a much bad way towant to choy, says conductor leader men
today. The proceeding was a paidpodcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes

(57:15):
neither an endorsement of the products offeredor the ideas expressed.
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