• Why Personalized Health Care Matters: Root Cause, Time, and the Doctor–Patient Relationship
    May 13 2026

    In this episode of the Neurotrition Podcast, Dr. Jackson McKeehan explores what personalized health care really means and why so many people feel unseen in rushed, symptom-focused medical systems. He opens with a simple but important question: what if health care was not standardized and reactive, but actually built around the individual person sitting in front of the practitioner? From there, the conversation unfolds into a deeper look at how personalized, root-cause-focused care differs from the conventional model many patients have come to expect.

    A major focus of the episode is the problem with short modern medical visits. Dr. McKeehan points out that the average appointment often leaves very little time to meaningfully address complex or chronic concerns, especially when multiple issues are discussed in a single visit. He argues that when time is limited, deeper context gets lost — and with it, the ability to really understand the patient’s history, patterns, lifestyle, stress, and environment.

    The episode also highlights the importance of the doctor–patient relationship. Dr. McKeehan contrasts fragmented care with a more direct, relationship-driven approach built on trust, listening, and understanding the whole person. His message is clear: truly personalized care is not possible without actually knowing the patient. That idea becomes the foundation for the rest of the episode.

    From there, the conversation moves into the difference between symptom-based care and system-based care. Using examples like fatigue, brain fog, and poor sleep, Dr. McKeehan explains that the same symptom can come from very different root causes, which means a one-size-fits-all approach often falls short. He challenges the “X symptom equals Y treatment” mindset and makes the case that if human physiology is individualized — from hormones and biochemistry to genetics and lifestyle — then treatment should be individualized too.

    Dr. McKeehan also discusses why labs and health histories matter so much. Similar symptoms do not always mean similar lab findings, and even similar lab results do not automatically call for the same treatment plan. He emphasizes deep history-taking, pattern recognition, and thoughtful assessment as a way to save patients from years of ineffective or overly generic care.

    Overall, this episode is a strong case for slower, more intentional, more individualized care — especially for people dealing with chronic issues, unresolved symptoms, or the frustrating experience of being told that everything looks normal even when they still do not feel well. It is a conversation about time, trust, physiology, and why your body deserves more than a generic plan.


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    Podcast produced byJuming Delmas Studios
    Sponsored by North Florida Spine and Wellness

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    41 mins
  • Brain Imbalance Explained: What Left Brain vs Right Brain Really Means
    Apr 22 2026

    In this episode of the Neurotrition Podcast, we take a deeper look at what people really mean when they talk about being “left-brained” or “right-brained” and why that popular idea is often misunderstood. Instead of reducing the conversation to personality traits like “logical” versus “creative,” this episode reframes the issue as one of neurological dominance and imbalance—how well different parts of the brain are actually developing, communicating, and functioning together. The discussion makes the case that this imbalance can have real consequences for behavior, learning, emotional regulation, sensory processing, and overall health.

    The episode explains that in many cases, the issue is not that one hemisphere is “too strong,” but that the other side may be underdeveloped or not functioning the way it should. From there, the conversation explores how brain imbalance may arise through developmental timing differences, inflammation, trauma, neglect, retained primitive reflexes, lack of movement, or insufficient sensory input. These factors can create uneven patterns in how a person processes information, responds emotionally, coordinates movement, and interprets the world around them.

    A major focus of the episode is breaking down the different roles associated with each hemisphere. The right hemisphere is described as playing a major role in big-picture awareness, sensory integration, nonverbal communication, attachment, empathy, emotional depth, attention, and parasympathetic “rest and digest” function. The left hemisphere, by contrast, is framed as more involved in sequencing, language, detail orientation, motor activation, routine, explicit memory, goal-directed behavior, and sympathetic “fight or flight” activity. By laying out these functions clearly, the episode helps listeners understand why imbalances can show up in such varied ways across cognition, behavior, mood, and physical regulation.

    The episode also gives practical examples of how these patterns may appear in both children and adults. It connects hemisphere imbalance to symptoms and experiences often associated with ADHD, autism, OCD, tics, sensory integration disorder, language delays, inattentiveness, anxiety, social difficulties, overwhelm, low motivation, and disorganization. Rather than treating these only as isolated labels, the episode encourages listeners to think in terms of underlying brain patterns and developmental function.

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    Podcast produced byJuming Delmas Studios
    Sponsored by North Florida Spine and Wellness

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    23 mins
  • Tired, Moody, Unmotivated? It Could Be Andropause
    Apr 1 2026

    In this episode of the Neurotrition Podcast, Dr. Z breaks down andropause—the gradual decline in testosterone that many men can begin experiencing from their late 30s into their 40s.

    Unlike female menopause, andropause often develops slowly, which means many men may not immediately recognize what’s happening. Symptoms like fatigue, burnout, irritability, anxiety, depression, low motivation, reduced libido, and cognitive changes are often dismissed as stress or simply “getting older.”

    In this conversation, Dr. Z explores:

    What andropause is and why it can be difficult to recognize
    The common emotional, mental, and physical symptoms men experience
    Why hormone signaling starts in the brain and how the HPA axis and cortisol play a major role
    How stress modulation and vagus nerve stimulation can support recovery and healing
    Why resistance training is one of the most powerful non-medical interventions
    The importance of looking beyond total testosterone with more comprehensive testing
    Key markers to evaluate, including free testosterone, cortisol, thyroid function, A1C, insulin, CRP, and homocysteine
    Important considerations around hormone replacement, estrogen balance, and supportive compounds like DIM, calcium-D-glucarate, and Tongkat Ali
    Why men need to be proactive with their health before symptoms become more serious

    This episode is a reminder that low energy, mood changes, and lack of drive are not always things men should ignore. With the right testing, lifestyle support, and medical guidance, it is possible to improve overall health, performance, and quality of life.

    #NeurotritionPodcast #Andropause #Testosterone #MensHealth #Hormones #HormoneHealth #LowTestosterone #Wellness #FunctionalMedicine #HealthPodcast

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    Podcast produced byJuming Delmas Studios
    Sponsored by North Florida Spine and Wellness

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    26 mins
  • Perimenopause: When Hormones, Brain, and Genetics Collide
    Mar 18 2026

    In this episode of the Neurotrition Podcast, Dr. Z explores perimenopause not merely as a hormonal decline, but as a complex brain-body transition. She opens with a relatable story about “Sarah,” a typical patient whose first signs of perimenopause weren’t the expected hot flashes—but anxiety, brain fog, and fatigue. Through Sarah’s journey, Dr. Z illustrates how perimenopause begins as a signaling problem in the brain, not simply a hormone deficiency.

    Dr. Z explains that the brain, specifically the hypothalamus, acts as the body’s control tower—responding to fluctuating estrogen levels that affect neurotransmitters like serotonin, dopamine, and GABA. Sarah’s dizziness becomes another key clue, linked to estrogen receptors in the vestibular system that regulate balance and orientation. When estrogen fluctuates, this system becomes hypersensitive, leading to sensory overload and even panic attacks as the brain misinterprets instability as threat.

    As the story unfolds, Dr. Z reveals how these changes ripple through other systems. The thyroid often gets unfairly blamed for symptoms because estrogen also influences thyroid function and hormone conversion. Meanwhile, genetic differences—such as COMT and CYP1B1 variants—can impact how women metabolize hormones, intensifying symptoms.

    The episode culminates in a holistic view: Sarah’s struggles with mood, balance, thyroid, and fatigue weren’t separate issues but interconnected expressions of her body adapting to shifting hormones. By understanding the interplay between brain regulation, adrenal and thyroid function, and genetics, women can reframe perimenopause as a natural neuroendocrine recalibration rather than a breakdown.

    Dr. Z closes with an empowering takeaway: Perimenopause isn’t just a hormone problem—it’s a brain-body transition. Once women understand the systems involved, the symptoms start to make sense, and healing can begin.

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    Podcast produced byJuming Delmas Studios
    Sponsored by North Florida Spine and Wellness

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    27 mins
  • The Attention Crisis We Created
    Feb 23 2026

    ADHD has become one of the most common diagnoses of modern childhood, yet the way we define it hasn’t changed. We still describe behaviors. We still chase symptoms. And we still overlook what may actually be happening inside the brain.

    In this episode, I challenge the traditional model of ADHD and reframe it as a problem of neurological imbalance. Attention, motivation, impulse control, and even physical restlessness are not random traits — they are outputs of specific brain networks developing at different speeds.

    As technology, screen exposure, and modern lifestyles reshape how children grow up, the gap between brain development and environmental demands may be widening. The result is a generation struggling to focus, regulate emotion, and stay present — not because they are broken, but because their brains are adapting to a world that changed faster than biology could.

    In this conversation, I look at ADHD from the level of brain function rather than behavior, because effective intervention begins with identifying which systems are underdeveloped, not simply suppressing the outward signs.

    Because attention isn’t just a skill. It’s a neurological state.

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    Podcast produced byJuming Delmas Studios
    Sponsored by North Florida Spine and Wellness

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    24 mins
  • The Melillo Method Explained | Dr. Melillo on Brain-Based Healing
    Feb 4 2026

    In this episode of the Neurotrition Podcast, host Matthew “Dr. Z” sits down with Dr. Melillo to explore The Melillo Method—a brain-based approach focused on understanding how neurological balance influences behavior, cognition, and overall health.

    Dr. Melillo explains the core principles behind his method, how brain asymmetry can affect development and performance, and why addressing neurological function is a critical piece of long-term wellness. This conversation bridges neuroscience, nutrition, and real-world application in a way that’s accessible, practical, and grounded in clinical insight.

    Whether you’re a clinician, parent, educator, or someone interested in brain health, this episode offers a deeper look into how targeted neurological strategies can support better outcomes across the lifespan.

    🎧 Listen & Subscribe to the Neurotrition Podcast
    Available on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

    👇 Topics Covered

    • What The Melillo Method is and how it works
    • Brain balance and neurological development
    • The connection between nutrition and brain function
    • Practical insights for long-term brain health

    🔔 Subscribe for weekly conversations on neuroscience, nutrition, and performance.

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    Podcast produced byJuming Delmas Studios
    Sponsored by North Florida Spine and Wellness

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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Cholesterol Isn’t the Problem — Here’s What You’re Missing
    Jan 29 2026

    Cholesterol Isn’t the Problem — Here’s What You’re Missing

    For years, cholesterol has been blamed as the main cause of heart disease — but what if that story is incomplete?

    In this episode, we break down the real drivers of heart health, why cholesterol has been misunderstood, and what most people (and headlines) get wrong about cardiovascular risk. We explore the role of inflammation, lifestyle factors, metabolic health, and why focusing on cholesterol alone can distract from the bigger picture.

    If you’ve ever been confused by conflicting health advice or felt like something wasn’t adding up, this conversation is for you.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • Why cholesterol isn’t the root problem it’s made out to be
    • What actually contributes to heart disease
    • The difference between markers vs. causes
    • How modern health narratives oversimplify complex biology
    • What to focus on instead for long-term heart health

    This episode is educational, thought-provoking, and challenges mainstream assumptions — without fear-mongering.

    👉 Subscribe for more conversations that rethink health, science, and wellness
    👍 Like if this episode changed how you view cholesterol
    💬 Comment below: What’s the biggest health myth you’ve believed?

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    Podcast produced byJuming Delmas Studios
    Sponsored by North Florida Spine and Wellness

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    35 mins
  • If You’re Still Struggling After COVID, This Might Be Why
    Jan 9 2026

    Long COVID can feel like your body just won’t hit reset. Fatigue, brain fog, dizziness, a racing heart can show up in all kinds of ways, and no two stories are the same.

    In this episode, I break down why your body might still be stuck in fight-or-flight mode, what systems COVID really messes with, and why inflammation sometimes just won’t turn off. I’ll also share the natural ways we can start to tip the balance back to actually feel better.

    Think of this as a roadmap for understanding your body, reclaiming your energy, and finally seeing a path to recovery.

    ⚠️ Always check with your healthcare provider before trying supplements or protocols mentioned here.

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    Podcast produced byJuming Delmas Studios
    Sponsored by North Florida Spine and Wellness

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    25 mins