Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact: The School of Applied Functional Medicine (SAFM)

How Hormone Havoc Surprisingly Begins in the Gut | E42

42 min · 16. kesä 2026
jakson How Hormone Havoc Surprisingly Begins in the Gut | E42 kansikuva

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Most hormone protocols fail because they start in the wrong place.   Practitioners spend years chasing estrogen dominance, sluggish thyroid, and cortisol dysregulation without ever looking at what's driving those patterns. Tracy Harrison makes the case in this episode that the hormone imbalance root causes you're missing are often sitting upstream in the digestive tract. Gut health and hormone imbalance are far more connected than most clinical training suggests.   Hormone synthesis, conversion, metabolism, and clearance all depend on a functioning digestive system. When that system breaks down, hormones follow.   Tracy walks through five key insights every functional medicine practitioner needs to know. She explains how maldigestion, nutrient absorption, and hormone synthesis are all tied together, and how patients on acid-suppressing medications, those with type 2 diabetes, and anyone with fatty liver disease are quietly losing the raw materials hormone synthesis depends on. She also covers how gut hormones like GLP-1 and GIP directly regulate insulin in ways that go far beyond standard assessment. How T4-to-T3 conversion and gut dysfunction silently undermine thyroid function even when the thyroid gland itself looks fine.   The episode also looks at how gut microbiome estrogen metabolism gets disrupted when bacterial overgrowths like commensal E. coli and SIBO-associated bacteria produce beta-glucuronidase, an enzyme that pushes estrogen metabolites back into circulation instead of out of the body. And how cortisol and gut dysfunction drive each other, with dysbiosis and intestinal permeability actively generating HPA axis activation, not just responding to it.   If you have patients who are doing everything right and still not getting better, this episode gives you a new place to look.   Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Gut Health and Hormone Imbalance: Why the Gut Is Where It Often Starts 02:24 Maldigestion, Malabsorption, and the Nutrients Hormones Depend On 04:51 Acid-Suppressing Medications and Their Hidden Impact on Digestion 07:16 Type 2 Diabetes, Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency, and Digestive Enzyme Deficiency 11:57 How Gut Dysmotility and the Microbiome Affect Insulin and GLP-1 Function 16:35 Short-Chain Fatty Acids, Fiber, and Metabolic Hormone Regulation 19:02 T4 to T3 Thyroid Hormone Conversion in the Gut 23:45 Estrogen Metabolism, Methylation, and the Role of Gut Microbiome 28:18 Beta-Glucuronidase, Dysbiosis, and Estrogen Dominance 30:30 Cortisol, Gut Dysfunction, and the Stress Hormone Feedback Loop   SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive [https://schoolafm.com/gut-course] Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox [https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips]  Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training [https://schoolafm.com/our-program] Subscribe to our YouTube channel [https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel] Access quick clinical tips on Facebook [http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/]  Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm [http://hivecast.fm]

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jakson How Hormone Havoc Surprisingly Begins in the Gut | E42 kansikuva

How Hormone Havoc Surprisingly Begins in the Gut | E42

Most hormone protocols fail because they start in the wrong place.   Practitioners spend years chasing estrogen dominance, sluggish thyroid, and cortisol dysregulation without ever looking at what's driving those patterns. Tracy Harrison makes the case in this episode that the hormone imbalance root causes you're missing are often sitting upstream in the digestive tract. Gut health and hormone imbalance are far more connected than most clinical training suggests.   Hormone synthesis, conversion, metabolism, and clearance all depend on a functioning digestive system. When that system breaks down, hormones follow.   Tracy walks through five key insights every functional medicine practitioner needs to know. She explains how maldigestion, nutrient absorption, and hormone synthesis are all tied together, and how patients on acid-suppressing medications, those with type 2 diabetes, and anyone with fatty liver disease are quietly losing the raw materials hormone synthesis depends on. She also covers how gut hormones like GLP-1 and GIP directly regulate insulin in ways that go far beyond standard assessment. How T4-to-T3 conversion and gut dysfunction silently undermine thyroid function even when the thyroid gland itself looks fine.   The episode also looks at how gut microbiome estrogen metabolism gets disrupted when bacterial overgrowths like commensal E. coli and SIBO-associated bacteria produce beta-glucuronidase, an enzyme that pushes estrogen metabolites back into circulation instead of out of the body. And how cortisol and gut dysfunction drive each other, with dysbiosis and intestinal permeability actively generating HPA axis activation, not just responding to it.   If you have patients who are doing everything right and still not getting better, this episode gives you a new place to look.   Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Gut Health and Hormone Imbalance: Why the Gut Is Where It Often Starts 02:24 Maldigestion, Malabsorption, and the Nutrients Hormones Depend On 04:51 Acid-Suppressing Medications and Their Hidden Impact on Digestion 07:16 Type 2 Diabetes, Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency, and Digestive Enzyme Deficiency 11:57 How Gut Dysmotility and the Microbiome Affect Insulin and GLP-1 Function 16:35 Short-Chain Fatty Acids, Fiber, and Metabolic Hormone Regulation 19:02 T4 to T3 Thyroid Hormone Conversion in the Gut 23:45 Estrogen Metabolism, Methylation, and the Role of Gut Microbiome 28:18 Beta-Glucuronidase, Dysbiosis, and Estrogen Dominance 30:30 Cortisol, Gut Dysfunction, and the Stress Hormone Feedback Loop   SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive [https://schoolafm.com/gut-course] Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox [https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips]  Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training [https://schoolafm.com/our-program] Subscribe to our YouTube channel [https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel] Access quick clinical tips on Facebook [http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/]  Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm [http://hivecast.fm]

16. kesä 202642 min
jakson A Seasoned NP Discovers Passion and Courage to Live Her Purpose | E41 kansikuva

A Seasoned NP Discovers Passion and Courage to Live Her Purpose | E41

Some practitioners find functional medicine through curiosity. Heather Slusher found it through a tendon rupture. On this episode of Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact, host Tracy Harrison sits down with Heather to explore what functional medicine for nurse practitioners really means when it's built from personal crisis, clinical curiosity, and a deep desire to practice differently.   Heather's path into root-cause medicine started with a single antibiotic prescription. After taking fluoroquinolone for a sinus infection, she suffered a tendon rupture in her foot and spent years navigating fluoroquinolone toxicity symptoms at a time when many providers still did not recognize them. She never went back to practicing the same way again.   What she built from it isn't a rejection of conventional medicine. Chronic disease is where the conventional model falls short, not because of the people in it, but because the system isn't designed to ask why. Functional medicine clinical practice fills that gap by treating the whole person instead of matching symptoms to a protocol.   Nine years after launching her integrative medicine practice in Florida, Heather is opening a second location. She starts every patient relationship by asking what they most want to fix, then works from there. Overtesting without a clear action plan leaves patients overwhelmed and no closer to feeling well, and Heather has seen too many people give up because of it.   The patient stories speak for themselves. A long COVID patient reported 90 percent improvement in a month with a targeted long COVID treatment plan. A woman who was wheeled in after one dose of Levaquin was driving again within two months. A school principal with two decades of undiagnosed Hashimoto's finally felt like herself.   Functional medicine for nurse practitioners isn't just a career pivot. For Heather, it's the whole point.   Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Welcome to Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact 02:16 Heather Slusher's Journey From Conventional to Integrative Medicine 06:24 Fluoroquinolone Toxicity Symptoms and How They Changed Everything 11:11 Building an Independent Functional Medicine Practice From Scratch 14:17 Why Functional Medicine and Conventional Medicine Are Not at Odds 22:07 The Problem With Overtesting in Functional Medicine Clinical Practice 26:19 Why Listening Is a Clinical Tool, Not an Afterthought 31:16 Advice for Nurse Practitioners Considering a New Path 34:10 Long COVID Treatment and Patient Success Stories 42:15 Closing Reflections on Purpose, Impact, and Fulfillment Connect with Heather Slusher: Visit the SunCoast Optimal Wellness website [http://www.suncoastoptimalwellness.com] Follow SunCoast Optimal Wellness on Facebook [http://www.facebook.com/suncoastoptimalwellness] Follow SunCoast Optimal Wellness on Instagram [http://www.instagram.com/suncoastoptimalwellness] Connect with SunCoast Optimal Wellness on LinkedIn [http://www.linkedin.com/in/heatherfoxslusher] SuncoastWellness@outlook.com [SuncoastWellness@outlook.com]   SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive [https://schoolafm.com/gut-course] Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox [https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips]  Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training [https://schoolafm.com/our-program] Subscribe to our YouTube channel [https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel] Access quick clinical tips on Facebook [http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/]  Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm [http://hivecast.fm]

2. kesä 202644 min
jakson What We Are Missing About Hypertension | E40 kansikuva

What We Are Missing About Hypertension | E40

High blood pressure is often treated as a number to push down, yet the body may be raising it for reasons standard care never investigates.   On Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact, host Tracy Harrison reframes functional medicine for high blood pressure as a better way to understand the biology behind hypertension. Medication can protect arteries in the short term, but the bigger clinical opportunity is asking why blood pressure has become chronically elevated in the first place.   This episode gives practitioners a sharper lens for identifying the root causes of hypertension in each patient. Tracy explains how vascular dysfunction can begin long before conventional labs raise concern. One key example is the connection between insulin resistance and blood pressure. Elevated fasting insulin can damage the arterial lining, disrupt sodium balance, and reduce nitric oxide production years before blood sugar looks abnormal.   Tracy also expands the clinical conversation around stress and hypertension. Stress is not limited to emotional strain or a busy calendar. Poor sleep, snoring, sleep apnea, chronic infections, and late-night screen habits can keep the nervous system in a sympathetic state that drives blood pressure higher.   The conversation also connects gut health and cardiovascular disease through inflammation, intestinal permeability, and microbial debris that can damage the glycocalyx. That protective vascular lining plays a major role in nitric oxide and vascular health, which affects how well arteries dilate and respond.   For practitioners who want more than symptom control, functional medicine for high blood pressure offers a more complete clinical path. It looks at metabolism, sleep, stress physiology, gut and oral health, electrolytes, potassium, magnesium, and why the body is maintaining higher pressure. This is a reminder that hypertension care can be more precise, more personal, and more clinically meaningful when the deeper drivers are part of the conversation.   Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Functional Medicine for High Blood Pressure: Why Treating the Numbers Is Not Enough 04:19 Controlled Physiology vs. Healthy Vascular Biology: The Gap Conventional Care Misses 09:05 Nitric Oxide, the Glycocalyx, and Why Endothelial Health Drives Blood Pressure 11:24 Insulin Resistance and Blood Pressure: The Subclinical Stage Most Labs Will Miss 16:06 Chronic Stress, the Sympathetic Nervous System, and Elevated Blood Pressure 20:38 Sleep Apnea, Snoring, and the Hidden Blood Pressure Connection 25:26 Environmental Toxins and Inflammatory Damage to the Arterial Lining 27:42 Gut Barrier Dysfunction and Its Direct Impact on Cardiovascular Health 30:08 Oral Dysbiosis and Why the Mouth Is an Overlooked Root Cause of Hypertension 32:25 Sodium, Potassium, Magnesium, and the Electrolyte Balance That Actually Matters SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive [https://schoolafm.com/gut-course] Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox [https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips]  Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training [https://schoolafm.com/our-program] Subscribe to our YouTube channel [https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel] Access quick clinical tips on Facebook [http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/]  Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm [http://hivecast.fm]

19. touko 202637 min
jakson An NP's Refreshing Insights on a FxMed Inspired Career | E39 kansikuva

An NP's Refreshing Insights on a FxMed Inspired Career | E39

Most practitioners assume the only honest path into functional medicine is to leave conventional medicine behind, and Katie Creedon has spent nearly two decades proving that assumption wrong.   Katie is an adult nurse practitioner with deep roots in geriatric care, a program director for a VA nurse practitioner residency, and the founder of New England Functional Wellness. On this episode of Functional Medicine for Real World Impact, host Tracy Harrison sits down with Katie to talk about what functional medicine for nurse practitioners looks like when it is built gradually, intentionally, and without abandoning the clinical foundation that makes the work credible.   Katie’s path has not been a straight line. She kept her footing in conventional medicine while building something new on the side, and that deliberate pace turned out to be exactly right for her life, her family, and her sense of professional credibility. She talks about what finally pushed her to act, why the mosaic career model works better for most practitioners than the all-or-nothing narrative suggests, and what she has learned about keeping care simple when the functional medicine toolbox makes complexity feel like progress.   Brain health in midlife sits at the center of Katie’s clinical focus. After years of watching dementia affect patients and families in nursing home settings, she became convinced that dementia prevention deserved far more attention than conventional care was giving it. Her perspective on healthy aging functional medicine is grounded in real clinical experience, and she is candid about the challenges of bringing that message to patients who are not yet thinking about their brains and to colleagues who remain skeptical of the field.   If you are navigating an integrative medicine career transition and wondering whether you have to choose between stability and alignment, Katie’s experience offers a more honest picture of what the path can look like.   Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction to Functional Medicine for Nurse Practitioners 01:48 Katie Creedon's Background in Geriatric Care 05:53 How a Grandmother Shaped a Career in Aging 10:07 When Conventional Medicine Stops Being Enough 14:10 Finding Functional Medicine and Reigniting Clinical Purpose 18:16 Integrating Functional Medicine Into a Conventional Role 23:16 Building a Practice Gradually Without Burning It All Down 27:11 Why Both Conventional and Functional Medicine Matter 32:32 Mentoring New Nurse Practitioners With a Root Cause Lens 37:00 The Best and Worst of Functional Medicine in Practice 44:19 What Starting a Business Teaches You About Yourself 49:45 Dementia Prevention and Brain Health in Midlife 56:16 Letting Your Why Drive Your Courage 57:41 Advice for Practitioners Ready to Realign Their Careers Connect with Katie Creedon: Visit the New England Functional Wellness website [http://www.newenglandfunctionalwellness.com] Follow New England Functional Wellness on Instagram [http://www.instagram.com/newenglandfunctionalwellness] Connect with Katie on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/katie-creedon-np/] New England Functional Wellness Linktree [https://linktr.ee/nefw] Email Katie at katie@newenglandfunctionalwellness.com   SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive [https://schoolafm.com/gut-course] Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox [https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips]  Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training [https://schoolafm.com/our-program] Subscribe to our YouTube channel [https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel] Access quick clinical tips on Facebook [http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/]  Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm [http://hivecast.fm]

5. touko 20261 h 2 min
jakson The Revolving Door of Dysbiosis: Advanced Gut Insights | E38 kansikuva

The Revolving Door of Dysbiosis: Advanced Gut Insights | E38

Recurring dysbiosis is a clinical clue that the body’s terrain still favors chaos over repair. On Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact, Tracy Harrison speaks directly to practitioners who keep seeing recurrent gut dysbiosis return after a short-lived win. Her point is direct. Recurrent gut dysbiosis is rarely a failure of testing or the wrong antimicrobial. More often, it reflects an internal environment that allows the imbalance to persist.   This conversation is for practitioners who are tired of the revolving door. When a patient improves for a few weeks and then slides back into symptoms, Tracy urges you to look upstream. She walks through the clinical patterns that can keep dysbiosis in place even when interventions seem solid. That includes hypochlorhydria, pancreatic insufficiency, poor bile flow, impaired gut motility, and everyday habits that keep digestion from doing its job. She also explains that maldigested food is a common root cause of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth - but often left unexplored.   One of the strongest parts of this discussion is the reminder that the mouth is part of the gut. Oral dysbiosis, poor chewing, dry mouth, and common mouthwash habits can influence what happens farther downstream. Tracy also brings attention to medication patterns that quietly keep patients stuck, from acid suppressing drugs to NSAIDs, antibiotics, steroids, and metformin. For busy providers, that makes this episode useful because it brings everyday case details back into focus.   Gut healing is not only about what to remove. It is about what needs to work again. Diet quality matters. Bowel habits matter. The nervous system matters. Tracy makes a clear connection between stress and gut health, showing how chronic sympathetic activation can impair digestion, weaken immune resilience, and keep patients locked in recurrence. If you want better long-term outcomes, this episode will help you shift from chasing bugs to rebuilding terrain. That shift is what can break the cycle of recurrent dysbiosis and gives providers a more durable path forward.   Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Recurrent Gut Dysbiosis and the Revolving Door Problem 02:24 Why Gut Dysbiosis Keeps Coming Back in Clinical Practice 04:43 Maldigestion, Hypochlorhydria, and Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth 11:46 Impaired Gut Motility, Thyroid Function, and Constipation Clues 16:17 Oral Dysbiosis, Chewing, and Why the Mouth Shapes Gut Health 23:19 Medications That Can Quietly Sustain Gut Dysbiosis 30:24 Diet, Fiber, and Feeding the Gut Microbiome the Right Way 32:43 Stress and Gut Health Through the Nervous System Connection 39:29 How to Stop Recurrent Gut Dysbiosis by Changing the Terrain SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive [https://schoolafm.com/gut-course] Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox [https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips]  Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training [https://schoolafm.com/our-program] Subscribe to our YouTube channel [https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel] Access quick clinical tips on Facebook [http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/]  Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm [http://hivecast.fm]

21. huhti 202641 min