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“Telehealth is not ideal for everything.” – Dr. Sajad Zalzala
In this episode of Compound Wisdom, Steve Sood sits down with Dr. Sajad Zalzala of Root Causes Medical to unpack what longevity medicine actually looks like when you move beyond “wait until you’re sick, then treat.”
Dr. Zalzala shares how he started in computer science, nearly left medical school, and ultimately moved toward functional, holistic, and integrative medicine after realizing traditional care often defaults to “cut it out” or “block it.” From there, a migraine patient became his telehealth “lightbulb moment,” leading him into the early telehealth world (2016–2017), where doctors were often building the protocols and infrastructure as they went.
The conversation then goes deep on today’s longevity landscape: why peptides are misunderstood, why women’s HRT is being re-evaluated after years of fear-driven headlines, why TRT injections can become a long-term commitment for men, and why stem cells still feel like a gray-zone “Wild West” without consistent outcomes data. Dr. Zalzala also introduces his Optional Aging Academy and the “seven drivers of aging” framework—built to make aging science more actionable for real people.
Takeaways00:00 – Recording setup and welcome
00:29 – From computer science to medicine (the overseas “awakening”)
01:35 – Almost leaving medical school + early struggles
02:03 – Why “cut or block” medicine felt incomplete
03:01 – Ray Kurzweil influence + the path toward longevity thinking
03:44 – Finding doctors who practiced prevention and root-cause care
04:13 – Where allopathic medicine shines (and where it doesn’t)
04:56 – Migraines: the telehealth “lightbulb moment”
06:25 – Early telehealth: learning the space (2016–2017)
06:53 – Doctors building protocols, documentation, and systems
07:32 – The stepping-stone years and learning regulations
08:10 – Launching AgelessRx in 2019 (longevity accessibility)
09:26 – Telehealth vs in-person: what it can’t replace
10:53 – Telehealth as focused care (“super specialist” effect)
12:52 – Longevity products overview: peptides, HRT, TRT, stem cells
13:18 – Peptides: what they are and why they’re misunderstood
15:13 – Peptides vs HGH and the “guardrails” idea
16:37 – Women’s HRT: WHI fallout and what’s changing
18:56 – HRT dosing: why “back to 30-year-old levels” can be risky
22:24 – TRT for men: time/place, and why injections can trap patients
27:10 – “Superman” phase, why it fades, and the hard part of stopping
28:17 – Stem cells: types, gray zones, and missing standards
31:16 – Hallmarks of aging vs “seven drivers” framework
34:36 – Optional Aging Academy: assess, intervene, reassess
36:58 – One change for telehealth: shared outcomes + best practices
38:30 – Closing question: how do you make it stick?
39:25 – Wrap-up and thanks
#CompoundWisdom #Telehealth #Longevity #FunctionalMedicine #IntegrativeMedicine #PreventiveHealth #Peptides #HRT #TRT #StemCells #DigitalHealth #PatientOutcomes
By Dante McClain“Telehealth is not ideal for everything.” – Dr. Sajad Zalzala
In this episode of Compound Wisdom, Steve Sood sits down with Dr. Sajad Zalzala of Root Causes Medical to unpack what longevity medicine actually looks like when you move beyond “wait until you’re sick, then treat.”
Dr. Zalzala shares how he started in computer science, nearly left medical school, and ultimately moved toward functional, holistic, and integrative medicine after realizing traditional care often defaults to “cut it out” or “block it.” From there, a migraine patient became his telehealth “lightbulb moment,” leading him into the early telehealth world (2016–2017), where doctors were often building the protocols and infrastructure as they went.
The conversation then goes deep on today’s longevity landscape: why peptides are misunderstood, why women’s HRT is being re-evaluated after years of fear-driven headlines, why TRT injections can become a long-term commitment for men, and why stem cells still feel like a gray-zone “Wild West” without consistent outcomes data. Dr. Zalzala also introduces his Optional Aging Academy and the “seven drivers of aging” framework—built to make aging science more actionable for real people.
Takeaways00:00 – Recording setup and welcome
00:29 – From computer science to medicine (the overseas “awakening”)
01:35 – Almost leaving medical school + early struggles
02:03 – Why “cut or block” medicine felt incomplete
03:01 – Ray Kurzweil influence + the path toward longevity thinking
03:44 – Finding doctors who practiced prevention and root-cause care
04:13 – Where allopathic medicine shines (and where it doesn’t)
04:56 – Migraines: the telehealth “lightbulb moment”
06:25 – Early telehealth: learning the space (2016–2017)
06:53 – Doctors building protocols, documentation, and systems
07:32 – The stepping-stone years and learning regulations
08:10 – Launching AgelessRx in 2019 (longevity accessibility)
09:26 – Telehealth vs in-person: what it can’t replace
10:53 – Telehealth as focused care (“super specialist” effect)
12:52 – Longevity products overview: peptides, HRT, TRT, stem cells
13:18 – Peptides: what they are and why they’re misunderstood
15:13 – Peptides vs HGH and the “guardrails” idea
16:37 – Women’s HRT: WHI fallout and what’s changing
18:56 – HRT dosing: why “back to 30-year-old levels” can be risky
22:24 – TRT for men: time/place, and why injections can trap patients
27:10 – “Superman” phase, why it fades, and the hard part of stopping
28:17 – Stem cells: types, gray zones, and missing standards
31:16 – Hallmarks of aging vs “seven drivers” framework
34:36 – Optional Aging Academy: assess, intervene, reassess
36:58 – One change for telehealth: shared outcomes + best practices
38:30 – Closing question: how do you make it stick?
39:25 – Wrap-up and thanks
#CompoundWisdom #Telehealth #Longevity #FunctionalMedicine #IntegrativeMedicine #PreventiveHealth #Peptides #HRT #TRT #StemCells #DigitalHealth #PatientOutcomes