Episodios

  • Progesterone, Stress & the “Progesterone Steal” Explained
    Jan 28 2026

    In this episode of our progesterone series (Episode 5), Dr. Brendan McCarthy — Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Tempe, Arizona — breaks down the often-misunderstood relationship between stress, ovulation, progesterone, and cortisol.

    We explore the concept commonly referred to as the “progesterone steal” and why this term can be misleading. Rather than hormones being “stolen,” Dr. McCarthy explains how the body intelligently reroutes hormone production under stress to prioritize survival over reproduction.

    This episode covers:

    • Why the body must feel safe to ovulate and produce progesterone

    • How chronic stress impacts PMS, fertility, and cycle regularity

    • The truth about cortisol (and why it isn’t the villain it’s often made out to be)

    • Why low progesterone is not a personal failure or flaw

    • Why you can’t medicate someone out of stress — and what good medicine actually looks like

    This conversation is about biology, not blame. Your body is not broken — it’s responding exactly as designed.

    Dr. Brendan McCarthy is the founder and Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Arizona. With over two decades of experience, he’s helped thousands of patients navigate hormonal imbalances using bioidentical HRT, nutrition, and root-cause medicine. He’s also taught and mentored other physicians on integrative approaches to hormone therapy, weight loss, fertility, and more. If you’re ready to take your health seriously, this podcast is a great place to start.

    👇 Tap Subscribe to learn more about what’s actually happening in your body, and what to do about it.

    📘 Read Dr. McCarthy’s Book: Jump Off the Mood Swing – A Sane Woman’s Guide to Her Crazy Hormones https://www.amazon.com/Jump-Off-Mood-Swing-Hormones/dp/0999649604

    📲 Follow Dr. McCarthy:

    Instagram: @drbrendanmccarthy

    TikTok: @drbrendanmccarthy

    Website: www.protealife.com

    💬 Got a question or topic for a future episode? Let us know in the comments!

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    25 m
  • Progesterone: Why Delivery Method Matters for Brain, Uterus & Breast Health
    Jan 22 2026

    In this episode, Dr. Brendan McCarthy, Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center, explains why progesterone delivery systems matter—and how different routes change what progesterone actually does in the body.

    Part 4 of the progesterone series covers oral, topical, vaginal, rectal, injectable, and sublingual progesterone, breaking down which methods affect the brain, uterus, and breast tissue—and why choosing the right route is critical.

    If progesterone hasn’t worked for you in the past, the issue may not be the dose, but how it was delivered.

    This episode focuses on education, patient agency, and thoughtful hormone care—no shortcuts, no selling.

    Subscribe for more in-depth conversations on hormones and women’s health, and share with someone who may benefit.

    Dr. Brendan McCarthy is the founder and Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Arizona. With over two decades of experience, he’s helped thousands of patients navigate hormonal imbalances using bioidentical HRT, nutrition, and root-cause medicine. He’s also taught and mentored other physicians on integrative approaches to hormone therapy, weight loss, fertility, and more. If you’re ready to take your health seriously, this podcast is a great place to start.

    👇 Tap Subscribe to learn more about what’s actually happening in your body, and what to do about it.

    📘 Read Dr. McCarthy’s Book: Jump Off the Mood Swing – A Sane Woman’s Guide to Her Crazy Hormones https://www.amazon.com/Jump-Off-Mood-Swing-Hormones/dp/0999649604

    📲 Follow Dr. McCarthy:

    Instagram: @drbrendanmccarthy

    TikTok: @drbrendanmccarthy

    Website: www.protealife.com

    💬 Got a question or topic for a future episode? Let us know in the comments!

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    28 m
  • Reverse Responding to Progesterone: Why Your Body Isn’t Failing You
    Jan 15 2026

    If progesterone makes you feel wired, anxious, angry, emotional, or unable to sleep, this episode is for you.

    In this deeply important continuation of our reverse responding series, Dr. Brendan McCarthy—Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center—returns to clarify what was missing in Episode 3C and to walk you through the real physiology, compassion, and treatment strategy behind reverse responding.

    Reverse responding is not intolerance, weakness, anxiety, noncompliance, or failure. It is an adaptive response rooted in threat-state physiology, chronic stress, and lived experience. Your body is not broken—it is protecting you.

    In this episode, Dr. McCarthy covers:

    • What reverse responding actually is (and what it is not)

    • The difference between sulfation and 5-alpha pathways

    • Why labs often miss this entirely

    • Why “just more progesterone” makes things worse

    • How trauma, chronic stress, and safety shape hormone response

    • The importance of earning permission from the nervous system

    • Practical treatment pillars:

      • Glycemic stability

      • Circadian safety and sleep rhythm

      • Reducing inflammatory load

      • Gentle nervous system regulation

      • Slow, low, respectful progesterone onboarding

    • Supplement strategies used clinically (and what to avoid)

    Most importantly, this episode is a reminder: You are not the problem. Your body is doing something intelligent.

    Dr. Brendan McCarthy is the founder and Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Arizona. With over two decades of experience, he’s helped thousands of patients navigate hormonal imbalances using bioidentical HRT, nutrition, and root-cause medicine. He’s also taught and mentored other physicians on integrative approaches to hormone therapy, weight loss, fertility, and more. If you’re ready to take your health seriously, this podcast is a great place to start.

    👇 Tap Subscribe to learn more about what’s actually happening in your body, and what to do about it.

    📘 Read Dr. McCarthy’s Book: Jump Off the Mood Swing – A Sane Woman’s Guide to Her Crazy Hormones https://www.amazon.com/Jump-Off-Mood-Swing-Hormones/dp/0999649604

    📲 Follow Dr. McCarthy:

    Instagram: @drbrendanmccarthy

    TikTok: @drbrendanmccarthy

    Website: www.protealife.com

    💬 Got a question or topic for a future episode? Let us know in the comments!

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    38 m
  • Why Progesterone Sometimes Backfires
    Jan 8 2026

    Dr. Brendan McCarthy, Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Tempe, Arizona, brings closure to an important and often misunderstood topic: progesterone reverse responders.

    Some women take progesterone expecting calm, better sleep, and emotional balance — but instead experience anxiety, irritability, agitation, or feeling “wired but tired.” These responses are real, not imagined, and not a personal failure.

    In this episode, Dr. McCarthy explains:

    • What progesterone reverse responding actually is (and what it is not)

    • Why this reaction is not an intolerance or allergy

    • How progesterone’s downstream metabolites affect the brain

    • The difference between the 5-alpha reductase pathway and sulfation pathways

    • Why labs can look “normal” while symptoms feel anything but

    • Common mistakes providers make (pushing the dose, “waiting it out,” or masking symptoms)

    • Why stress physiology plays a major role

    • How thoughtful, patient-centered medicine can help women heal

    Most importantly, this episode emphasizes listening to women, validating lived experiences, and practicing medicine with curiosity, humility, and care.

    Dr. Brendan McCarthy is the founder and Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Arizona. With over two decades of experience, he’s helped thousands of patients navigate hormonal imbalances using bioidentical HRT, nutrition, and root-cause medicine. He’s also taught and mentored other physicians on integrative approaches to hormone therapy, weight loss, fertility, and more. If you’re ready to take your health seriously, this podcast is a great place to start.

    👇 Tap Subscribe to learn more about what’s actually happening in your body, and what to do about it.

    📘 Read Dr. McCarthy’s Book: Jump Off the Mood Swing – A Sane Woman’s Guide to Her Crazy Hormones https://www.amazon.com/Jump-Off-Mood-Swing-Hormones/dp/0999649604

    📲 Follow Dr. McCarthy:

    Instagram: @drbrendanmccarthy

    TikTok: @drbrendanmccarthy

    Website: www.protealife.com

    💬 Got a question or topic for a future episode? Let us know in the comments!

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    29 m
  • Sulfation, Trauma, and Why Progesterone Doesn’t Always Calm You
    Dec 31 2025

    In this episode of the podcast, Dr. Brendan McCarthy—Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Tempe, Arizona—continues his in-depth progesterone series with a deep dive into reverse responders and an often-overlooked mechanism: hormone sulfation.

    Many women take progesterone expecting better sleep, calmer moods, and reduced anxiety—yet feel more alert, only mildly calmer, or see no benefit at all. This episode explains why that doesn’t mean progesterone is wrong for you.

    Dr. McCarthy breaks down:

    • What progesterone reverse responding really is

    • The difference between 5-alpha reductase pathways and sulfation

    • How the brain uses sulfation to buffer stress and trauma

    • Why progesterone may be stored instead of calming the nervous system

    • The role of chronic stress, PTSD, perimenopause, and hormone volatility

    • Why higher doses can make things worse

    • How thoughtful, low-dose, individualized hormone therapy actually works

    Dr. Brendan McCarthy is the founder and Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Arizona. With over two decades of experience, he’s helped thousands of patients navigate hormonal imbalances using bioidentical HRT, nutrition, and root-cause medicine. He’s also taught and mentored other physicians on integrative approaches to hormone therapy, weight loss, fertility, and more. If you’re ready to take your health seriously, this podcast is a great place to start.

    👇 Tap Subscribe to learn more about what’s actually happening in your body, and what to do about it.

    📘 Read Dr. McCarthy’s Book: Jump Off the Mood Swing – A Sane Woman’s Guide to Her Crazy Hormones https://www.amazon.com/Jump-Off-Mood-Swing-Hormones/dp/0999649604

    📲 Follow Dr. McCarthy:

    Instagram: @drbrendanmccarthy

    TikTok: @drbrendanmccarthy

    Website: www.protealife.com

    💬 Got a question or topic for a future episode? Let us know in the comments!

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    31 m
  • Why Progesterone Makes Some Women Feel Worse
    Dec 18 2025

    Have you taken progesterone expecting calm, better sleep, or relief from PMS… only to feel more anxious, wired, or worse overall? You are not a failure—and progesterone is not failing you. Your body is responding exactly as physiology dictates. The issue is how progesterone is being delivered and metabolized.

    In this episode, Dr. McCarthy explains:

    • What it means to be a progesterone reverse responder

    • How progesterone normally supports mood and brain chemistry through allopregnanolone

    • Why some women experience paradoxical anxiety, insomnia, or agitation

    • The role of the 5-alpha reductase pathway in progesterone metabolism

    • Why oral progesterone can overwhelm the brain in certain women

    • How PCOS, topical testosterone, stress, insulin resistance, and ultra-processed diets can amplify reverse responses

    • Why kinetics and delivery method matter just as much as dosage

    Dr. Brendan McCarthy is the founder and Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Arizona. With over two decades of experience, he’s helped thousands of patients navigate hormonal imbalances using bioidentical HRT, nutrition, and root-cause medicine. He’s also taught and mentored other physicians on integrative approaches to hormone therapy, weight loss, fertility, and more. If you’re ready to take your health seriously, this podcast is a great place to start.

    👇 Tap Subscribe to learn more about what’s actually happening in your body, and what to do about it.

    📘 Read Dr. McCarthy’s Book: Jump Off the Mood Swing – A Sane Woman’s Guide to Her Crazy Hormones https://www.amazon.com/Jump-Off-Mood-Swing-Hormones/dp/0999649604

    📲 Follow Dr. McCarthy:

    Instagram: @drbrendanmccarthy

    TikTok: @drbrendanmccarthy

    Website: www.protealife.com

    💬 Got a question or topic for a future episode? Let us know in the comments!

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    21 m
  • Progesterone & Your Brain: The Missing Link
    Dec 10 2025

    In Episode 2 of this deep-dive hormone series, Dr. Brendan McCarthy—Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Tempe, AZ—breaks down the part of progesterone almost no one talks about: its powerful role as a brain hormone.

    Most women are only taught that progesterone is about fertility and uterine lining. But the truth? Progesterone is a neurosteroid that influences your amygdala, hippocampus, and prefrontal cortex—three key brain regions that shape your stress response, emotional stability, sleep, memory, and self-trust.

    This episode covers: ✔️ Why perimenopause makes your brain feel “out of control” ✔️ The link between progesterone decline and anxiety, irritability, depression, night sweats, and brain fog ✔️ How progesterone converts to allopregnanolone (your brain’s natural calming signal) ✔️ Why women under chronic stress or in their late 30s–40s feel symptoms more intensely ✔️ How hormonal imbalance impacts memory, decision-making, and emotional regulation ✔️ Why you’re not broken—and what real validation and proper care looks like

    Dr. Brendan McCarthy is the founder and Chief Medical Officer of Protea Medical Center in Arizona. With over two decades of experience, he’s helped thousands of patients navigate hormonal imbalances using bioidentical HRT, nutrition, and root-cause medicine. He’s also taught and mentored other physicians on integrative approaches to hormone therapy, weight loss, fertility, and more. If you’re ready to take your health seriously, this podcast is a great place to start.

    👇 Tap Subscribe to learn more about what’s actually happening in your body, and what to do about it.

    📘 Read Dr. McCarthy’s Book: Jump Off the Mood Swing – A Sane Woman’s Guide to Her Crazy Hormones https://www.amazon.com/Jump-Off-Mood-Swing-Hormones/dp/0999649604

    📲 Follow Dr. McCarthy:

    Instagram: @drbrendanmccarthy

    TikTok: @drbrendanmccarthy

    Website: www.protealife.com

    💬 Got a question or topic for a future episode? Let us know in the comments!

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    33 m
  • Progesterone: The Breakthrough Women Deserve
    Dec 4 2025
    In today’s episode, I’m opening the first chapter of what I believe is the most important series I’ve ever created — a deep dive into progesterone and why it became the heart of my medical practice. For more than 20 years, I’ve watched this “simple, humble hormone” transform women’s lives in ways most conventional medicine overlooks. What started in two small treatment rooms has grown into a 25,000 sq ft facility, and the core of our success comes down to understanding progesterone’s impact on the female brain, stress response, and emotional resilience. In this episode, I break down: Why progesterone is far more than a reproductive hormone How it regulates the female stress response (amygdala, hippocampus, prefrontal cortex) Why anxiety, insomnia, irritability, and emotional overwhelm often map directly to progesterone decline Why so many women feel “unraveled” in their 40s — and why it’s not their fault The science behind oral vs. sublingual progesterone (and why I use troches) How conventional medicine often misses the root cause The importance of physicians showing their work, their data, and their citations The lived stories and clinical outcomes that changed how I practice medicine If you’ve ever felt dismissed, unseen, or told that your anxiety or mood changes are “just stress,” this episode is for you. This is the beginning of a 7-part series where I break down the neurobiology, endocrinology, testing, dosing, delivery methods, breast health, perimenopause, and more. Citations: Brinton, Roberta Diaz, et al. “Neurosteroids and Brain Function.” Steroids, vol. 81, 2014, pp. 61–78. Epperson, C. Neill, et al. “New Insights into Perimenopausal Depression: A Neuroendocrine Vulnerability Framework.” The Lancet Psychiatry, vol. 9, no. 2, 2022, pp. 110–118. Frye, Cheryl A. “Neurosteroids—Endogenous Modulators of GABA_A Receptors.” Pharmacology & Therapeutics, vol. 116, no. 1, 2007, pp. 58–76. Genazzani, Andrea R., et al. “Progesterone, Stress, and the Brain.” Human Reproduction Update, vol. 16, no. 6, 2010, pp. 641–655. Meeker, John D., et al. “Environmental Endocrine Disruptors: Their Effects on Human Reproduction and Development.” Reproductive Toxicology, vol. 25, 2008, pp. 1–7. Mellon, Stanley H. “Neurosteroid Regulation of Central Nervous System Development.” Pharmacology & Therapeutics, vol. 116, 2007, pp. 107–124. Mizrahi, Romy, et al. “The Role of Allopregnanolone in Stress, Mood, and Trauma.” Neurobiology of Stress, vol. 11, 2019, 100198. Paul, Steven M., and Graziano Pinna. “Allopregnanolone: From Molecular Pathways to Therapeutic Applications.” Current Opinion in Neurobiology, vol. 48, 2018, pp. 90–96. Pluchino, Nicoletta, et al. “Progesterone and Allopregnanolone: Effects on the Central Nervous System in the Luteal Phase and in Perimenopause.” Gynecological Endocrinology, vol. 36, no. 6, 2020, pp. 441–445. Rasgon, Natalie L., et al. “Perimenopausal Changes in the Brain and Mood: A Review.” Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, vol. 107, no. 4, 2022, pp. 1120–1134. Reddy, Doodipala Samba. “The Neurosteroid Allopregnanolone and GABA-A Receptor Modulation in Epilepsy and Mood Disorders.” Frontiers in Neuroscience, vol. 12, 2018, 933. Schiller, Crystal E., et al. “The Neuroendocrinology of Perimenopausal Depression.” Trends in Neurosciences, vol. 44, no. 2, 2021, pp. 119–135. Schumacher, Michael, et al. “Neuroprotective Effects of Progesterone and Its Metabolites.” Frontiers in Neuroendocrinology, vol. 33, 2012, pp. 415–439. Selye, Hans. “The General Adaptation Syndrome and the Diseases of Adaptation.” Journal of Clinical Endocrinology, vol. 6, no. 2, 1946, pp. 117–230. Sheng, Jun, and György Buzsáki. “Neuronal Firing and Theta Oscillations in the Amygdala During Fear Conditioning.” Neuron, vol. 53, 2007, pp. 653–667. Smith, Sheryl S. “Progesterone Withdrawal Increases Neuronal Excitability in the Hippocampus: A GABA_A Mechanism.” Journal of Neuroscience, vol. 28, 2008, pp. 10171–10179. Snyder, Jonathan S., et al. “Adult Hippocampal Neurogenesis and Stress Regulation.” Nature Reviews Neuroscience, vol. 12, 2011, pp. 1–9. Stanczyk, Frank Z., and Jerilynn C. Prior. “Progesterone and Progestins: A Review of Pharmacology, PK, and Clinical Use.” Steroids, vol. 82, 2014, pp. 1–8. Tu, Ming-Je, et al. “Oral, Vaginal, and Transdermal Progesterone: PK, Metabolism, and Tissue Distribution.” Drug Metabolism Reviews, vol. 52, no. 2, 2020, pp. 1–28. Wang, Jun, et al. “Stress, Amygdala Plasticity, and the Neuroendocrine Interface.” Nature Neuroscience, vol. 10, 2007, pp. 1093–1100. Weinstock, Marta. “The Hippocampus and Chronic Stress.” Neurochemical Research, vol. 42, 2017, pp. 1–12. World Health Organization. Progesterone and Reproductive Function: Clinical Perspectives. WHO, 2019. Dr. Brendan McCarthy is the founder and Chief ...
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    33 m