Épisodes

  • Rethinking Mind Mody Medicine for Neurodivergent Individuals
    May 17 2026

    Text Dr. Lenz any feedback or questions

    In this enlightening video, we explore the concept of "tension myositis syndrome," a condition where the brain generates chronic pain, challenging traditional biomedical views. We examine Dr. Sarno's groundbreaking work and how he explained the "mindbody syndrome" through a neurodevelopmental lens. Learn how understanding the intricate connection between the brain and pain and the role of emotions and pain can help manage conditions like nociplastic pain, offering strategies for healing and regulation.
    Imagine Sarah, living with chronic widespread pain for over a decade, her muscles and joints constantly aching, waking up exhausted. This video introduces the concept of "tension myositis syndrome" (TMS), explaining it as a condition where the brain generates pain, challenging traditional biomedical approaches. We explore Dr. John Sarno's work and suggest a "nociplastic pain" lens, including strategies for managing "sensory overload" and regulating "neurodiversity" systems, offering new perspectives on "chronic pain" within the framework of "mindbody syndrome."
    Imagine Sarah, living with chronic widespread pain for over a decade, her muscles and joints constantly aching, waking up exhausted. This video introduces the concept of "tension myositis syndrome" (TMS), explaining it as a condition where the brain generates pain, challenging traditional biomedical approaches. We explore Dr. John Sarno's work and suggest a "nociplastic pain" lens, including strategies for managing "sensory overload" and regulating "neurodiversity" systems, offering new perspectives on "chronic pain" within the framework of "mindbody syndrome."

    Click here for the YouTube Channel

    Support the show

    When I started this podcast and YouTube Channel—and the book that came before it—I had my patients in mind. Office visits are short, but understanding complex, often misunderstood conditions like fibromyalgia takes time. That’s why I created this space: to offer education, validation, and hope. If you’ve been told fibromyalgia “isn’t real” or that it’s “all in your head,” know this—I see you. I believe you. This podcast aims to affirm your experience and explain the science behind it. Whether you live with fibromyalgia, care for someone who does, or are a healthcare professional looking to better support patients, you’ll find trusted, evidence-based insights here, drawn from my 29+ years as an MD.


    Please remember to talk with your doctor about your symptoms and care. This content doesn’t replace per...

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    13 min
  • Why this OB GYN left medicine to become an ADHD coach
    May 16 2026

    Text Dr. Lenz any feedback or questions

    Navigating ADHD and Chronic Pain: Dr. Kerry Shea's Journey from OB GYN to ADHD Coach

    In this episode, we welcome Dr. Kerry Shea, an OB GYN who transitioned to working as an ADHD coach. Dr. Shea shares her personal experience living with ADHD and chronic pain, including a diagnosis of trigeminal neuralgia, and her struggles with various other invisible illnesses like endometriosis. Carrie explains how these challenges impacted her career in medicine and her eventual shift to coaching. She also touches upon the importance of understanding neurodivergence, the impact of chronic pain, and the necessity of a holistic approach to health and wellness. By sharing her story, Dr. Shea aims to validate the experiences of many who face similar issues and provide insight into coping strategies and the importance of seeking support.

    00:00 Introduction to Dr. Kerry Shea
    01:23 Carrie's Background and ADHD Diagnosis
    02:51 Medical Career and Chronic Pain Journey
    03:36 Struggles with Trigeminal Neuralgia and Work Environment
    05:40 Navigating the Medical System as a Patient
    07:16 Transition to ADHD Coaching
    07:45 Early Life and ADHD Awareness
    11:21 Chronic Pain and Neurodivergence
    16:57 Impact of ADHD on Medical Career
    28:34 Decision to Go on Disability
    37:11 The Challenges of Medical Specialties
    37:45 Physical Demands of OB-GYN
    38:12 Advice for Pre-Med and Med Students
    38:45 Chronic Pain and Early Symptoms
    39:38 Restless Leg Syndrome and ADHD
    42:41 Managing Restless Leg Syndrome
    48:05 Neurodivergence and Chronic Pain
    50:42 The Importance of Good Sleep
    58:55 Physician Burnout and Neurodivergence
    01:07:49 ADHD Coaching and Support
    01:11:08 Conclusion and Final Thoughts

    Click here for the YouTube Channel

    Click here for the YouTube channel

    International Conference on ADHD in November 2025 where Dr. Lenz will be one of the speakers.

    Joy Lenz

    Fibromyalgia 101. A list of fibromyalgia podcast episodes that are great if you are new and don't know where to start.

    Support the show

    When I started this podcast and YouTube Channel—and the book that came before it—I had my patients in mind. Office visits are short, but understanding complex, often misunderstood conditions like fibromyalgia takes time. That’s why I created this space: to offer education, validation, and hope. If you’ve been told fibromyalgia “isn’t real” or that it’s “all in your head,” know this—I see you. I believe you. This podcast aims to affirm your experience and explain the science behind it. Whether you live with fibromyalgia, care for someone who does, or are a healthcare professional looking to better support patients, you’ll find trusted, evidence-based insights here, drawn from my 29+ years as an MD.


    Please remember to talk with your doctor about your symptoms and care. This content doesn’t replace per...

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    1 h et 19 min
  • A Girl's Chronic Pain Reversal Story
    May 15 2026

    Text Dr. Lenz any feedback or questions

    00:00 A Mysterious Case
    00:59 Years of Unexplained Pain
    02:19 The Hidden Connection
    03:08 The Breakthrough Diagnosis
    04:03 Understanding the Science
    04:52 Sensory Processing Differences
    06:13 ADHD and Pain Regulation
    07:24 Amplifying Factors
    08:36 Diagnostic Overshadowing
    09:52 The Treatment Breakthrough
    10:40 Miraculous Results
    11:40 Multidisciplinary Approaches
    12:07 Community and Support
    12:43 Important Disclaimer
    13:07 Final Thoughts

    Click here for the YouTube Channel

    Support the show

    When I started this podcast and YouTube Channel—and the book that came before it—I had my patients in mind. Office visits are short, but understanding complex, often misunderstood conditions like fibromyalgia takes time. That’s why I created this space: to offer education, validation, and hope. If you’ve been told fibromyalgia “isn’t real” or that it’s “all in your head,” know this—I see you. I believe you. This podcast aims to affirm your experience and explain the science behind it. Whether you live with fibromyalgia, care for someone who does, or are a healthcare professional looking to better support patients, you’ll find trusted, evidence-based insights here, drawn from my 29+ years as an MD.


    Please remember to talk with your doctor about your symptoms and care. This content doesn’t replace per...

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    17 min
  • Why Your Doctor is Measuring Your Fibromyalgia Wrong
    May 14 2026

    Text Dr. Lenz any feedback or questions

    Beyond the Pain Scale: Using WPI/SSS and FIQR to Measure Fibromyalgia Severity and Treatment Progress

    The script explains that fibromyalgia care often relies too heavily on a 1–10 pain scale, overlooking fatigue, unrefreshed sleep, brain fog, and daily function, which leaves patients feeling unheard and clinicians without clear data. It describes how the American College of Rheumatology shifted from the 1990 tender point exam to revised criteria (2010, refined in 2011 and 2016) using two quick questionnaires: the Fibromyalgia Survey Criteria—Widespread Pain Index (19 pain regions) plus Symptom Severity Score (fatigue, unrefreshed sleep, cognitive symptoms, plus headaches/abdominal pain/depression), combined as the PSD—and the Revised Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQR), a 21-item measure of function, overall impact, and symptoms scored 0–100. Examples show how these tools provide baselines, track change, guide treatment adjustments, and capture clinically meaningful improvement beyond pain alone.

    00:00 Beyond the Pain Scale
    01:04 Why Fibro Gets Missed
    03:36 Old Criteria to New Tools
    04:30 Two Key Questionnaires
    05:45 Widespread Pain Index
    07:49 Symptom Severity Score
    09:35 Diagnosis and Tracking Baseline
    10:50 Advocating at Appointments
    11:22 FIQR Daily Function
    12:59 FIQR Impact and Symptoms
    15:51 Meaningful Improvement Benchmarks
    16:16 Using Both Tools Together
    19:05 Tracking Life Factors Over Time
    20:35 Wrap Up and Next Steps

    Click here for the YouTube Channel

    Support the show

    When I started this podcast and YouTube Channel—and the book that came before it—I had my patients in mind. Office visits are short, but understanding complex, often misunderstood conditions like fibromyalgia takes time. That’s why I created this space: to offer education, validation, and hope. If you’ve been told fibromyalgia “isn’t real” or that it’s “all in your head,” know this—I see you. I believe you. This podcast aims to affirm your experience and explain the science behind it. Whether you live with fibromyalgia, care for someone who does, or are a healthcare professional looking to better support patients, you’ll find trusted, evidence-based insights here, drawn from my 29+ years as an MD.


    Please remember to talk with your doctor about your symptoms and care. This content doesn’t replace per...

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    24 min
  • Fibromyalgia or Sjogren's? (How to Tell the Difference)
    May 13 2026

    Text Dr. Lenz any feedback or questions

    Sjogren’s vs Fibromyalgia: Key Differences in Symptoms, Diagnosis, and Treatment

    The script explains why Sjogren’s disease and fibromyalgia are often confused due to overlapping pain and fatigue, noting studies suggesting over 30% overlap, and stresses that accurate diagnosis guides appropriate treatment. Fibromyalgia is described as a central nervous system disorder driven by central sensitization, causing chronic widespread pain for at least three months, profound unrefreshing sleep fatigue, and “fibro fog,” with normal inflammatory and autoimmune labs. Sjogren’s is presented as a systemic autoimmune disease targeting tear and salivary glands, causing measurable dry eyes and dry mouth (sicca), increased dental problems, and possible joint/muscle pain and organ involvement. The script contrasts diagnostic approaches (WPI/symptom severity vs antibodies, Schirmer’s test, salivary flow, and minor salivary gland biopsy) and treatments (exercise/CBT/sleep and neurotransmitter meds vs dryness management, pilocarpine/cevimeline, hydroxychloroquine, and immunosuppressants).

    00:00 Invisible Pain Explained
    00:49 Why Diagnosis Matters
    02:41 Fibromyalgia Basics
    03:22 Fibro Symptoms Checklist
    04:57 What Fibro Is Not
    05:25 Sjogren's Core Signs
    07:05 Systemic Sjogren's Pain
    08:04 Sjogren's vs Fibro
    09:42 Testing and Lab Clues
    10:36 How Doctors Diagnose
    12:57 Treatment Roadmaps
    14:52 Key Takeaways and Advocacy
    16:12 Final Encouragement

    Click here for the YouTube Channel

    Support the show

    When I started this podcast and YouTube Channel—and the book that came before it—I had my patients in mind. Office visits are short, but understanding complex, often misunderstood conditions like fibromyalgia takes time. That’s why I created this space: to offer education, validation, and hope. If you’ve been told fibromyalgia “isn’t real” or that it’s “all in your head,” know this—I see you. I believe you. This podcast aims to affirm your experience and explain the science behind it. Whether you live with fibromyalgia, care for someone who does, or are a healthcare professional looking to better support patients, you’ll find trusted, evidence-based insights here, drawn from my 29+ years as an MD.


    Please remember to talk with your doctor about your symptoms and care. This content doesn’t replace per...

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    19 min
  • She Lost Her OB-GYN Career to Chronic Pain—Then Got into Disability Insurance
    May 12 2026

    Text Dr. Lenz any feedback or questions

    Dr. Stephanie Pearson on Workplace Injury, Invisible Disability Claims, and Disability Insurance Pitfalls

    Dr. Stephanie Pearson, an OB-GYN, describes how a workplace shoulder injury during a delivery led to chronic pain, failed surgery outcomes, job termination after FMLA, and denial of her hospital disability coverage due to a fine-print work-injury exclusion, followed by a disputed workers’ comp claim and a settlement after litigation. She explains how invisible or subjective conditions (e.g., chronic pain, fibromyalgia, headaches) are often doubted by clinicians and challenged by insurers, why “gray” cases face scrutiny, and how documentation of worst-day functional limits and timely medical-record collection are critical, including possible IMEs. Pearson contrasts employer group vs private disability insurance, highlighting taxable group benefits, benefit caps, portability issues, and common two-year limitations for subjective illnesses, while private policies depend on underwriting, exclusions, and participation limits. She also discusses underwriting impacts of medical coding, runs a physician peer support group, and shares personal recovery supports and her company’s client advocacy approach.

    00:00 Meet Dr Pearson
    01:23 Injury In Delivery Room
    02:25 Surgery And Termination
    03:03 Denied And Sued
    04:11 Mental Health Crisis
    05:54 New Purpose And Company
    06:40 Invisible Illness Bias
    09:05 Building A Paper Trail
    12:59 Independent Medical Exams
    16:33 Group Versus Private Coverage
    19:25 Subjective Illness Limits
    23:12 Underwriting Exclusions
    24:28 Fibromyalgia Stigma
    25:15 Contracts And Legal Review
    25:44 Coverage Limits Explained
    28:44 Underwriting and Intake Process
    29:54 Medical History Surprises
    32:10 No Underwriting Options
    33:32 Psych Diagnosis Pitfalls
    36:26 Staying Properly Insured
    38:44 Claims Su

    Click here for the YouTube Channel

    Click here for the YouTube channel

    International Conference on ADHD in November 2025 where Dr. Lenz will be one of the speakers.

    Support the show

    When I started this podcast and YouTube Channel—and the book that came before it—I had my patients in mind. Office visits are short, but understanding complex, often misunderstood conditions like fibromyalgia takes time. That’s why I created this space: to offer education, validation, and hope. If you’ve been told fibromyalgia “isn’t real” or that it’s “all in your head,” know this—I see you. I believe you. This podcast aims to affirm your experience and explain the science behind it. Whether you live with fibromyalgia, care for someone who does, or are a healthcare professional looking to better support patients, you’ll find trusted, evidence-based insights here, drawn from my 29+ years as an MD.


    Please remember to talk with your doctor about your symptoms and care. This content doesn’t replace per...

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    53 min
  • Small Fiber Neuropathy Doesn't Explain Fibromyalgia — Here's Why
    May 11 2026

    Text Dr. Lenz any feedback or questions

    Small Fiber Neuropathy and Fibromyalgia: Correlation, Not the Cause

    The script examines why findings of small fiber neuropathy (SFN) in fibromyalgia created hope for an objective “proof” of pain, yet argues this link is often misinterpreted as causation. It explains SFN, diagnosed via skin punch biopsy showing reduced nerve fiber density, and notes studies finding positive biopsies in about 40–60% of fibromyalgia patients, including a 2018 meta-analysis reporting 49% prevalence. The script outlines why SFN is not a smoking-gun cause: it appears in only about half of patients, nerve loss severity doesn’t reliably match pain severity, and SFN occurs in other conditions. It contrasts fibromyalgia with classic SFN in onset age, symptom patterns, comorbidities, and nerve-loss distribution, and presents central sensitization (nociplastic pain) as the primary driver, with SFN possibly a trigger in some or a downstream effect in others, emphasizing treatments targeting the central nervous system.

    00:00 SFN Fibro Controversy
    01:54 What Is SFN
    02:57 Biopsy Evidence Buzz
    04:04 Correlation Not Cause
    05:54 SFN vs Fibro Differences
    07:30 Central Sensitization Explained
    10:12 Where SFN Fits In
    11:10 Back Pain MRI Analogy
    11:56 Treatment Focus And Wrap

    Click here for the YouTube Channel

    Support the show

    When I started this podcast and YouTube Channel—and the book that came before it—I had my patients in mind. Office visits are short, but understanding complex, often misunderstood conditions like fibromyalgia takes time. That’s why I created this space: to offer education, validation, and hope. If you’ve been told fibromyalgia “isn’t real” or that it’s “all in your head,” know this—I see you. I believe you. This podcast aims to affirm your experience and explain the science behind it. Whether you live with fibromyalgia, care for someone who does, or are a healthcare professional looking to better support patients, you’ll find trusted, evidence-based insights here, drawn from my 29+ years as an MD.


    Please remember to talk with your doctor about your symptoms and care. This content doesn’t replace per...

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    16 min
  • 11 Doctors in One Year
    May 10 2026

    Text Dr. Lenz any feedback or questions

    High-Masking Autism, Anxiety, and the Multi-System Pattern of Chronic Invisible Illness

    Dr. Michael Lenz reacts to Auticate's video on autistic health and connects it to fibromyalgia-like “multi-system” chronic invisible illness, describing 11 doctors in a year before an autism diagnosis and a pattern of persistent symptoms despite normal tests. The script reviews common co-occurring issues in autistic people: skin burning/itching and psoriasis, GI problems (GERD, bloating, diarrhea), chronic cough with inconclusive lung workups, urinary frequency/nocturia, insomnia and restless legs/periodic limb movement disorder, widespread muscle tension and pain consistent with fibromyalgia flares after meltdowns, migraines, immune/allergy conditions (including mast cell issues), possible POTS/dysautonomia, and frequent mental health misdiagnoses and medication side effects. It argues a major culprit is chronic anxiety/fight-or-flight from high masking, and explains why medical care is hard for autistic people (waiting, sensory overload, communication, dismissal). It offers self-advocacy tips (lists, disclosure, processing time, bring support) and calls for more integrated, autism-informed healthcare.

    00:00 Reacting
    00:29 The Multisystem Pattern
    02:24 Skin Symptoms Explained
    03:41 Gut Issues and Reflux
    04:57 Chronic Cough Mystery
    06:25 Urinary Frequency and Pain
    07:42 Sleep Problems and RLS
    09:56 Muscle Pain and Flares
    11:11 Migraines and Sensory Overload
    12:53 Immune Issues and POTS
    14:18 Misdiagnoses and Masking
    15:32 The Culprit Anxiety Loop
    17:54 Why Doctor Visits Are Hard
    22:30 Self Advocacy Doctor Tips
    27:34 Wrap Up and Call to Share

    Click here for the YouTube Channel

    Click here for the YouTube channel

    Support the show

    When I started this podcast and YouTube Channel—and the book that came before it—I had my patients in mind. Office visits are short, but understanding complex, often misunderstood conditions like fibromyalgia takes time. That’s why I created this space: to offer education, validation, and hope. If you’ve been told fibromyalgia “isn’t real” or that it’s “all in your head,” know this—I see you. I believe you. This podcast aims to affirm your experience and explain the science behind it. Whether you live with fibromyalgia, care for someone who does, or are a healthcare professional looking to better support patients, you’ll find trusted, evidence-based insights here, drawn from my 29+ years as an MD.


    Please remember to talk with your doctor about your symptoms and care. This content doesn’t replace per...

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    32 min