The HRT University® Podcast

Nico Misleh

Welcome to the HRT University® Podcast, where patient care meets the realities of building a thriving practice. Hosted by nurse practitioner and entrepreneur Nico Misleh, this podcast offers insights into hormone replacement therapy, cash-based clinics, and the business of wellness. Whether you're a provider navigating clinical care or an aspiring entrepreneur, Nico shares honest conversations, practical advice, and expert interviews to guide you. Tune in to redefine success for your patients and yourself. Learn more about Nico and becoming an expert in HRT: https://bit.ly/4twBb0D

  1. 3d ago

    Cortisol and Hormones, a Signal Not the Problem

    Cortisol is one of the most misunderstood hormones in practice, and one of the most over-tested. In this episode, Nico Misleh, MSN, FNP-C makes the case that cortisol is a signal, not the root problem. You rarely need to measure it directly. What you do need to understand is what chronic cortisol is quietly doing to every hormone you're trying to optimize. Nico walks through the mechanism. Chronically elevated cortisol tanks free testosterone in men through competition at the hypothalamic level and blunted GnRH signaling. In women it suppresses ovulation and shortens the luteal phase, and that is the real reason progesterone stays low, not the old pregnenolone steal theory. It shunts T4 away from free T3 toward reverse T3, which is why a normal TSH tells you so little and free T3 tells you almost everything. Over time it dysregulates blood sugar, drives visceral fat, and feeds a slow inflammatory flywheel. Then the practical side. Why serum and salivary cortisol testing so often fail to line up with how a patient actually feels. Why cortisol dysfunction is almost always downstream of a broken metabolic environment. And what Nico treats instead: the terrain itself, thyroid and free T3, the sex hormones, gut and metabolic health, sleep, stress load, and eating patterns, with HRT as the backbone of that restoration. This is not an adrenal fatigue protocol. If you have a few patients who never quite respond to HRT the way the rest do, cortisol belongs on your differential, not as a lab to run, but as a lifestyle and metabolic picture to read. Cortisol sits inside Nico's Big Five framework, the organizing model of Module 1 in the HRT University Master Course. The HRT University® Master Course is jointly accredited through Pinnacle Conference, LLC (ACCME, ACPE, ANCC). Earn 30 CE hours, including 12 hours of pharmacology. Master Course: https://bit.ly/4twBb0D Nico's weekly clinical email: https://nicomislehnp.kit.com/8050eeea5f Provider community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1179376819949373/

    Cortisol and Hormones, a Signal Not the Problem
  2. Jul 6

    Seed Oils and Your Patients’ Hormones: The PUFA Problem Behind Stalled HRT

    You have a patient who is doing everything right on paper. Hormones optimized, sleep handled, xenoestrogen exposure coming down. And still the weight will not move, the thyroid numbers look off, and the inflammation lingers. In this episode Nico Misleh, MSN, FNP-C, makes the case that the missing variable is often sitting in the patient’s diet: seed oils, and the polyunsaturated fatty acids, or PUFAs, they deliver. Seed oils are the base fat in nearly every processed and restaurant food, and per capita linoleic acid intake has roughly tripled since the early 1900s. Nico walks through why that matters at the level of the cell. Using the cast iron versus stainless steel analogy from Module 1, he explains how PUFAs oxidize, form oxidized linoleic acid metabolites known as OXLAMs, and damage the mitochondria that every steroid hormone depends on. When mitochondria leak energy, cells drop from oxidative phosphorylation into inefficient glycolysis, progesterone and pregnenolone synthesis falls, thyroid signaling suffers at the receptor, and aromatase climbs. This is PUFAs, number four of the Big Five, and it compounds with endotoxin, cortisol, estrogen, and serotonin. He also separates what is mechanistically settled from what the clinical trial literature has not yet caught up to, explains why linoleic acid stored in fat has a half life close to two years, and shows how to raise diet with patients without tipping them into fear. This is the mechanism-first explanation for why some patients stall on a textbook HRT protocol, and what to do about it. Hosted by Nico Misleh, MSN, FNP-C, founder of HRT University. The HRT University® Podcast is provider-facing hormone education grounded in physiology and mechanism. For the full framework, including the PUFA and Big Five sections in Module 1, explore the HRT University Master Course, jointly accredited through Pinnacle Conference LLC (ACCME, ACPE, ANCC). Master Course: https://bit.ly/4twBb0D Newsletter: https://nicomislenp.kit.com/8050eeea5f Provider community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1179376819949373/

    Seed Oils and Your Patients’ Hormones: The PUFA Problem Behind Stalled HRT
  3. Jun 22

    Early Puberty and Xenoestrogens: What It Means for Your HRT Patients

    A century ago the average girl reached her first period at 16 or 17. Today it is closer to 12, and breast development is turning up routinely at 6, 7, even 8 years old. Genetics do not move that fast. Something in the environment is switching the reproductive axis on years ahead of schedule, and in this episode Nico Misleh, MSN, FNP-C, makes the case that the driver is xenoestrogens, and that it lands directly in your exam room. Xenoestrogens are estrogens from outside the body: the parabens, phthalates, pesticides, plastics, fragrances, and even some essential oils that bind estrogen receptors closely enough that the receptor cannot reliably tell them apart from the real thing. Exposure begins in utero and never fully stops, so it is both continuous and cumulative. Nico connects that early and prolonged estrogen signaling to the patients now arriving in HRT clinics in their 20s and 30s with pronounced estrogen dominance and progesterone deficiency, at times more severe than the perimenopausal patients down the hall. He reframes age of menarche and environmental exposure history as clinical variables that belong on the intake form, explains why some patients fail to respond to progesterone because of receptor competition rather than a dosing problem, and walks through the exposure-reduction conversation that lets the hormones you prescribe actually win at the receptor. This is the lifespan view of the Big Five: the same xenoestrogen load that pulled puberty early keeps shaping estrogen dominance, PCOS, and endometriosis in adults. Hosted by Nico Misleh, MSN, FNP-C, founder of HRT University. The HRT University Podcast is provider-facing hormone education grounded in physiology and mechanism. For the full clinical framework, including the xenoestrogen section in Module 1, explore the HRT University Master Course, jointly accredited through Pinnacle Conference LLC (ACCME, ACPE, ANCC): https://bit.ly/4twBb0D Newsletter: https://nicomislenp.kit.com/8050eeea5f Provider community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1179376819949373/

    Early Puberty and Xenoestrogens: What It Means for Your HRT Patients
  4. Jun 15

    The Estrobolome: How Your Patient's Gut Is Recycling Estrogen

    You have seen this patient. Her estrogen reads optimal. You have checked it two or three times. And she is still bloated, still constipated, still dealing with breast tenderness, heavy bleeding, and the irritability that shows up like clockwork before her period. The labs say one thing. The woman in front of you says another. In this episode, Nico Misleh, MSN, FNP-C breaks down the estrobolome: the collection of gut bacteria and bacterial genes that decide whether estrogen leaves the body or gets sent back into circulation. The liver does its job. It conjugates estrogen and packages it for excretion through bile and stool. Then beta-glucuronidase, produced by a disrupted microbiome, cleaves that package open and frees the estrogen to reabsorb through the gut wall and travel back to the liver. This is enterohepatic recirculation, and it is a problem of accumulation. It builds quietly for years, then surfaces as estrogen dominance, PCOS, PMDD, fibroids, and elevated breast cancer risk. Nico connects the mechanism to what you can actually do. Why industrialized guts carry higher beta-glucuronidase capacity. Why a menopausal woman can run higher circulating estrogen than expected with no progesterone to counterbalance it. Why a patient who reacts to a low dose of estrogen may have a gut problem, not a dosing problem. Then he walks through the targeted interventions he reaches for first: the raw carrot, coffee and gut motility, glycine and taurine for phase two liver detoxification, and the role of progesterone and thyroid in clearing estrogen instead of recycling it. HRT University is a physiology-first clinical education program for licensed providers. Jointly accredited through Pinnacle Conference LLC (ACCME, ACPE, ANCC) for 30 CEUs. Learn more about the Master Course: https://bit.ly/4twBb0D HRTU Newsletter: https://nicomislenp.kit.com/8050eeea5f Join the HRT University Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1179376819949373/

    The Estrobolome: How Your Patient's Gut Is Recycling Estrogen
  5. Jun 1

    How to Market a Medical Practice: Email, Social Media, and Storytelling

    You hired a logo designer, picked your brand colors, maybe even named your clinic something clever. And now you are ready to hand the whole thing to an ad agency and watch the patients roll in. Except that is not how it works. Not even close. In this episode, Nico Misleh, MSN, FNP-C walks through how to market a medical practice from scratch, and why spending money on agencies before you have done the foundational work is one of the fastest ways to burn cash as a new practice owner. He talks about the daily email practice that shaped his own voice over eighteen months, the Facebook group strategy that builds community without feeling like a sales pitch, and why your social media content is probably talking to your colleagues instead of your patients. He also breaks down the esthetics example that keeps showing up in provider marketing: the Moxi 3000 announcement that impresses other clinicians and confuses every cold lead who reads it. Then he flips it into a story-driven version that actually speaks to the patient sitting on the other side of the screen. If you have been wondering why your content is not converting or why your marketing feels like it is missing something, this episode lays out the organic playbook that comes before the ad spend. HRT University is a physiology-first clinical education program for licensed providers. Jointly accredited through Pinnacle Conference LLC (ACCME, ACPE, ANCC) for 30 CEUs. Learn more about HRT University: https://bit.ly/4twBb0D HRTU Newsletter: https://nicomislenp.kit.com/8050eeea5f Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1179376819949373/

    How to Market a Medical Practice: Email, Social Media, and Storytelling
  6. May 27

    The Cash-Pay HRT Practice: What Actually Works

    This week I'm switching from clinical to business. I want to talk about the stuff nobody told me when I was building my own clinic. Apollo Health Optimization is three years in now, and it's been the best decision of my life, professionally and personally. Most providers approach building a cash-pay HRT clinic backwards. They start with the brand, the marketing, the website, and treat the clinical work as something they'll catch up on once patients are flowing in. The clinical foundation is not a prerequisite for the business. It IS the business. In this episode I walk through the mug analogy, the surgeon analogy, why patients can feel the difference between real clinical mastery and the performance of it, and why my friend Ashley got 200 patients in her first year doing almost no traditional marketing. I get into the donut-shop comparison for why word of mouth runs medicine, the brick-and-mortar to virtual transition I made at Apollo, why geography is now irrelevant for a cash-pay HRT clinic, and the predatory equipment sales and marketing agencies you should not be writing checks to in year one. I close with the four-step sequence I'd follow if I were starting today: clinical mastery, then reps with patients, then a practice model that emerges from the clinical work, then the brand on top of all of it. If you're a provider weighing the move out of insurance, or you've already made it and the practice isn't building the way you thought it would, this one is for you. 00:00 Switching from clinical to business, the stuff nobody told me01:32 Apollo three years in, the best decision of my life02:14 The Field of Dreams approach and why providers get it backwards04:08 The clinical foundation IS the business05:10 The mug analogy06:46 Built on clinical depth, no traditional marketing07:11 The surgeon analogy, why patients can feel confidence08:30 My friend Ashley and 200 patients in year one08:57 What happens when you fake it for too long09:41 My NP school primary care rotation11:54 Studying hormones obsessively, building the framework12:33 Hormones as a symphony, not separate parts14:26 Word of mouth in medicine vs. the donut shop16:40 Patients call it Nico's Place18:59 The brick-and-mortar to virtual transition20:31 Geography is irrelevant, patients fly in from everywhere22:53 Predatory laser and ultrasound reps23:56 Step one of the sequence: clinical foundation, for real25:01 Step two: actually treat patients, competency builds confidence27:10 Step three: let the practice model emerge from the clinical work29:04 Step four: build the brand last, the whiteboard story31:20 Mastery, practice model, marketing, in that order The HRT University(R) Master Course is jointly accredited through Pinnacle Conference LLC (ACCME, ACPE, ANCC) for 30 CE hours including 12 hours of pharmacology. Course: https://bit.ly/4twBb0D. Newsletter: https://nicomislenp.kit.com/8050eeea5f. Community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1179376819949373/. About the host. Nico Misleh, MSN, FNP-C, is a nurse practitioner, the founder of HRT University, and the owner of Apollo Health Optimization.

    The Cash-Pay HRT Practice: What Actually Works
  7. May 18

    Birth Control is Not Treatment: What Providers Should Use instead

    A 16-year-old walks into your office with acne and walks out with a birth control script. So does the 28-year-old with heavy periods, the 35-year-old with PMS, and the 42-year-old with migraines. Same prescription for almost every female symptom that touches the cycle. Most of us write it without thinking, and most of us were trained to. In this episode, Nico Misleh, MSN, FNP-C makes the case that birth control isn't medicine for any of those things. It's medicine for pregnancy prevention. For everything else we use it for, it's suppression, and it costs the patient the diagnostic information you needed to actually treat what's wrong. He walks through what hormonal contraception is doing to the HPO axis, why synthetic progestins aren't the same compound as bioidentical progesterone, and what a real PCOS (now renamed PMOS) workup looks like when the pill isn't the first move. He's also honest about the cognitive dissonance providers run into when they realize the prescription they've written thousands of times might not have been the right call, and reframes that moment as the start of better practice, not a verdict on what came before. The HRT University Master Course is jointly accredited through Pinnacle Conference LLC (ACCME, ACPE, ANCC) and offers 30 CE credits across six modules, including the Female and Advanced Female sections that cover hormonal contraception, bioidentical progesterone, and PMOS in clinical depth. Explore the Master Course: https://bit.ly/4twBb0D Join the Free Newsletter: https://nicomislenp.kit.com/8050eeea5f Facebook Community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1179376819949373/ Website: https://hrtuniversity.com Follow HRT University on Instagram: @hrtuniversity Standard Links

    Birth Control is Not Treatment: What Providers Should Use instead

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About

Welcome to the HRT University® Podcast, where patient care meets the realities of building a thriving practice. Hosted by nurse practitioner and entrepreneur Nico Misleh, this podcast offers insights into hormone replacement therapy, cash-based clinics, and the business of wellness. Whether you're a provider navigating clinical care or an aspiring entrepreneur, Nico shares honest conversations, practical advice, and expert interviews to guide you. Tune in to redefine success for your patients and yourself. Learn more about Nico and becoming an expert in HRT: https://bit.ly/4twBb0D

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