Brain Fog Treatment in Johnson City, TN

Quick Answer

Brain fog is a cluster of cognitive symptoms including forgetfulness, mental sluggishness, poor focus, and difficulty finding words. It’s a signal, not a diagnosis, and common causes include hormone imbalance, thyroid dysfunction, blood sugar instability, nutrient deficiencies, chronic stress, poor sleep, and post-viral inflammation. Treatment starts with identifying which of these apply through comprehensive lab work, then addressing the actual driver.

You walk into a room and forget why. You reread the same sentence three times and still don’t catch it. The word you need is right there, then it’s gone. Conversations drift past you. You’re not lazy. You’re not getting old. Something is off, and you can feel it every day.

Brain fog is real. It’s not a diagnosis on its own, it’s a signal. Your body is telling you something underneath is out of balance. At Peak Performance Wellness & Aesthetics in Johnson City, Eddie Hughes, FNP-BC works to find the cause instead of handing you another prescription to mask it.

Most people who come in looking for brain fog treatment have already been told their labs are normal, their symptoms are stress, or that they just need more sleep. In our experience, persistent brain fog is usually traceable to one or more identifiable drivers: hormone imbalance, thyroid dysfunction, nutrient deficiencies, blood sugar instability, poor sleep, or chronic inflammation. The path to clearer thinking starts with finding which of those apply to you.

Some people have felt bad for so long they forgot what feeling good actually feels like. Because everyone around them feels the same way, they assume it's normal. It isn't. (Peak Performance Wellness graphic.)
Call (423) 212-3703 to book a consultation. Same-week appointments are usually available.
Clinically reviewed by Eddie Hughes, FNP-BC. Board-certified family nurse practitioner licensed in Tennessee with over fifteen years of clinical experience across emergency medicine, neurosurgery, hospital medicine, and regenerative medicine. Last reviewed: June 2026.

What Brain Fog Actually Feels Like

People describe it different ways depending on who they are and what’s driving it. The patterns we hear in the clinic line up with what people post online and what the research shows.

  • Forgetting why you walked into a room
  • Losing the thread halfway through a conversation
  • Reading the same paragraph over and over
  • Searching for a word you know you know
  • Feeling mentally slow, like thinking through molasses
  • Trouble switching between tasks
  • Sleeping eight hours and still waking up groggy
  • Headaches that come with the fuzziness
  • Short fuse with your kids, your spouse, your coworkers
  • Avoiding meetings or social plans because you can’t trust your own head

If two or three of these sound like a normal Tuesday for you, that’s not normal. That’s worth a workup.

When Should You Seek Treatment for Brain Fog?

A foggy afternoon after a bad night of sleep is normal. Brain fog that won’t go away is not. Consider getting evaluated when:

  • Cognitive symptoms have lasted more than a few weeks
  • The fog is affecting your work performance or how you parent
  • You feel mentally exhausted despite getting enough sleep
  • Concentration problems are getting worse, not better
  • You notice it most after meals or in the mid-afternoon
  • It started during perimenopause, menopause, or a noticeable energy decline
  • Symptoms began or worsened after a COVID infection
  • You’ve been told your labs are “normal” but you still don’t feel right

Patients drive in from across Johnson City, Bristol, Kingsport, Elizabethton, Erwin, and the broader Tri-Cities region for this kind of root-cause workup, and most have waited too long before coming. They assume it’s stress or aging. In our experience, most cases trace back to a small set of identifiable patterns, and a workup is usually the difference between guessing and knowing.

âš  When Brain Fog Is a Medical Emergency

A small number of cognitive symptoms are warning signs of something more serious. If you experience any of the following, do not wait for an appointment. Call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department:

  • Sudden confusion or disorientation
  • Sudden trouble speaking, slurred speech, or word loss
  • One-sided weakness, facial droop, or numbness
  • Sudden vision changes or loss of vision
  • A severe headache that came on like a thunderclap
  • A new seizure
  • Rapidly worsening memory loss over days or weeks

These can be signs of stroke, intracranial bleeding, or other conditions that need urgent evaluation. The brain fog this page addresses is the persistent, gradual, lifestyle-disrupting kind, not acute neurological symptoms.

Why Brain Fog Happens

Brain fog is a symptom. The actual problem is usually somewhere else in the body. These are the root causes we see most often in patients across Johnson City, Bristol, Kingsport, and the Tri-Cities.

Hormone Shifts

Estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone all influence how your brain uses energy. When these drop or swing, cognition takes a hit. Women in perimenopause and menopause often describe the fog as the worst symptom, worse than the hot flashes. Men with low testosterone usually notice it as motivation loss and mental dullness before they connect it to their hormones.

Estrogen supports blood flow and neurotransmitter activity in the brain. Progesterone calms the nervous system and protects nerve fibers. Testosterone supports focus, drive, and mental stamina in both men and women. When any of these fall out of range, you feel it upstairs first.

Related reading: bioidentical hormone replacement therapy, low testosterone therapy, perimenopause treatment, and hormone pellet therapy for women.

Thyroid Dysfunction

Your thyroid runs your metabolism, including how your brain uses energy. Even mild hypothyroidism slows everything down. The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases lists fatigue, depression, and difficulty thinking and concentrating among the common symptoms of an underactive thyroid. People with Hashimoto’s disease often have brain fog years before they get a clear diagnosis because standard panels miss it. A full panel looks at TSH, free T3, free T4, and thyroid antibodies, not just TSH alone.

Chronic Stress and Cortisol

Cortisol is your stress hormone. Short bursts are useful. Constant elevation wrecks your sleep, hammers your hippocampus (the part of the brain that handles memory), and leaves you wired and tired at the same time. A lot of patients walk in describing burnout. The labs show cortisol patterns that match the story.

Blood Sugar and Insulin Resistance

When your blood sugar swings high and low, your brain feels it. Insulin resistance keeps glucose from getting into cells efficiently, and the brain runs on glucose. The mid-afternoon crash, the foggy hour after lunch, the carbohydrate cravings that wreck your focus, this is metabolic.

Body composition matters here too. Visceral fat drives inflammation that crosses into the brain. A body composition scan shows what a scale can’t.

Nutrient Deficiencies

Low B12, low vitamin D, low folate, low iron. Any of these alone can cloud your thinking. We see them constantly, especially in women, in people on long-term acid blockers, and in anyone eating a restrictive diet. The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes that B12 deficiency affects between 3 percent and 43 percent of older adults and that medications like metformin and acid-reducing drugs can interfere with absorption. Replenishing what’s missing is fast and effective when the labs confirm a deficiency.

Vitamin D injections and Myers Cocktail IV therapy are common tools when the labs point that direction.

Poor Sleep

You can’t out-supplement bad sleep. Sleep apnea, insomnia, restless legs, and shift work all degrade cognition. We screen for sleep issues during the intake because no treatment plan works if you’re sleeping four hours a night.

Long COVID and Post-Viral Fog

A lot of people who had COVID never fully came back. According to the CDC, brain fog, fatigue, and post-exertional malaise are among the most commonly reported Long COVID symptoms, and more than 200 symptoms in total have been identified. Post-viral cognitive symptoms often involve inflammation, mitochondrial dysfunction, and autonomic nervous system disruption. It needs a workup, not a wait-and-see.

Medications

Antihistamines, sleep aids, certain blood pressure medications, anticholinergics, statins, and a long list of others can dull cognition. Sometimes the fix is a conversation with your prescriber about alternatives.

Inflammation and Gut Issues

Chronic inflammation, food sensitivities, and gut imbalances all influence brain function. The gut-brain axis is real. When the lining is irritated and the microbiome is off, cognition suffers.

Why Most Brain Fog Treatment Falls Short

Most people who walk into a primary care office complaining of brain fog get the same routine. A basic TSH, maybe a B12, maybe a CBC. Everything comes back “normal,” and they get told it’s stress, or aging, or anxiety, and handed an SSRI.

The problem is “normal” on a lab report means within the broad reference range. It does not mean optimal. A TSH of 3.8 is “normal.” It’s also high enough to cause symptoms in plenty of people. A testosterone of 320 ng/dL is “normal” for a 50-year-old man. It’s also low enough to wreck his focus and energy.

Brain fog needs a thorough workup interpreted by someone who treats people, not numbers.

Testing and Lab Work for Brain Fog

Most clinics order a TSH and a B12 and call it a day. When those come back inside the broad reference range, the workup ends there. We go further because brain fog is multifactorial, and you can’t treat what you haven’t measured.

A comprehensive brain fog workup typically includes the following, ordered based on your history and symptoms.

Full Thyroid Panel

  • TSH
  • Free T4
  • Free T3
  • Reverse T3
  • Thyroid antibodies (TPO and TgAb) to screen for Hashimoto’s

Sex Hormones

  • Estradiol
  • Progesterone
  • Total and free testosterone
  • DHEA-S
  • SHBG
  • LH and FSH where relevant

Metabolic Markers

  • Fasting glucose
  • Fasting insulin
  • HbA1c
  • Lipid panel

Inflammation Markers

  • hs-CRP
  • Homocysteine

Nutrient Status

  • Vitamin B12
  • Folate
  • Vitamin D (25-hydroxy)
  • Ferritin and a full iron panel
  • Magnesium

Adrenal & Stress

  • Morning cortisol, with diurnal cortisol patterns when warranted

Body Composition

We interpret results using optimal ranges informed by clinical experience, not just the wide reference ranges used to flag obvious disease.

How We Approach Brain Fog at Peak Performance

Eddie Hughes, FNP-BC has spent over fifteen years in clinical medicine across emergency medicine, neurosurgery, hospital medicine, and regenerative medicine. He uses many of these protocols personally. He understands what optimal feels like firsthand, not just what the reference range says is acceptable.

Here’s how the process works.

Consultation and historyWe sit down and listen. When did the fog start? What changed? What does a bad day look like versus a good one? What medications are you on? How is your sleep, your diet, your stress, your cycle if applicable?
Comprehensive labsSee the testing section above for a typical panel. The actual orders are tailored to your presentation.
Body composition and metabolic assessmentVisceral fat, muscle mass, and metabolic rate tell us a lot about what’s driving inflammation and how the body is using energy.
A plan you can actually followNo 30-supplement stack you’ll abandon in two weeks. A targeted plan that addresses the actual drivers we identified, with a clear timeline for when you should expect to feel different.
Follow-upTreatment is iterative. We recheck labs, adjust, and refine based on how you respond.

Treatments We Use

The right treatment depends on what your labs and history reveal. Not every patient is a candidate for every therapy, and we discuss eligibility, risks, and expected timeline before starting anything.

  • Hormone optimization for hormonal drivers. BHRT for women in perimenopause or menopause, TRT for men with confirmed low testosterone, and pellet therapy for patients who prefer a steady-state delivery. Eligibility is based on labs and a full medical history.
  • Thyroid optimization when the panel shows dysfunction, sometimes involving T3 alongside T4 when conversion is poor. Treatment follows current endocrine guidelines and ongoing monitoring.
  • NAD+ injections for cellular energy and mitochondrial support, used as one component of a broader plan rather than a stand-alone fix.
  • Peptide therapy for targeted cognitive, recovery, and inflammation support based on individual goals and current regulatory status.
  • Targeted nutrient repletion through vitamin D injections, Myers Cocktail IV, and B12 injections when deficiencies are confirmed on labs.
  • Medical weight loss when insulin resistance and metabolic dysfunction are driving the fog. For appropriately selected patients, reducing visceral fat is one of the most reliable ways to improve cognitive symptoms.
  • Sleep and stress strategy built into the plan. We don’t ignore the basics, and we refer for sleep studies when warranted.

Individual response varies. We set expectations during the consult and adjust the plan based on follow-up labs and how you actually feel.

What Life Looks Like When the Fog Lifts

Patients describe it in similar ways once their labs are dialed in and their treatment is working.

You wake up and your head is clear. You’re at the kitchen counter making coffee and you realize you remembered everyone’s schedule for the day without checking your phone.

You’re in a meeting and the right word comes when you need it. You hold the thread of a conversation start to finish.

You read a book in the evening and actually retain what you read.

You have patience with your kids again. You have energy for your spouse. You stop avoiding social plans because you trust your own head.

You feel like you again. That’s the goal. Not a tweak. The version of you that’s been missing.

Ready to Find the Cause?

Book a brain fog consultation with Eddie Hughes, FNP-BC. Most patients are seen within a week.

Book Your Consult

Or call (423) 212-3703

Brain Fog Treatment for Patients Across the Tri-Cities

Peak Performance Wellness & Aesthetics is located at 3980 Bristol Hwy, Johnson City, TN 37601. While the clinic is in Johnson City, we regularly see brain fog patients driving in from across Northeast Tennessee and Southwest Virginia. Root-cause workups for cognitive symptoms aren’t widely available in the region, and most patients tell us the drive is worth it for an evaluation that goes beyond a basic TSH and B12.

Approximate Drive Times to the Clinic

Gray~10 min via TN-36
ETSU Campus~10 min
Jonesborough~12 min via I-26
Elizabethton~15 min via US-321
Erwin~22 min via I-26
Bristol~25 min via I-26
Kingsport~30 min via I-26

Our Thursday hours run until 6:00 PM, which works well for patients commuting in after work from Kingsport, Bristol, and surrounding areas. If you’re coming from farther out and want to consolidate labs and the consult into a single visit, mention that when you call and we’ll coordinate the schedule.

About Eddie Hughes, FNP-BC

Eddie Hughes is a board-certified family nurse practitioner with over fifteen years of clinical experience across emergency medicine, neurosurgery, hospital medicine, and regenerative medicine. He founded Peak Performance to practice the kind of medicine he wished his patients had access to in the hospital and ER, medicine that addresses root causes instead of managing symptoms one prescription at a time.

He uses many of the same protocols on himself that he prescribes for patients. When you sit down with Eddie, you’re talking to a clinician who understands what optimal feels like firsthand.

Learn more on the About Eddie page.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Medical Disclaimer. This page is for educational purposes and does not replace medical evaluation by a licensed provider. Brain fog can occasionally be associated with serious neurological or systemic conditions. If you experience sudden confusion, slurred speech, weakness on one side, vision loss, a severe new headache, a seizure, or rapidly worsening memory, seek emergency care immediately. Individual response to treatment varies, and not every therapy is appropriate for every patient.

Get Started

If you’ve been told everything is “normal” and you still feel like a fog rolled into your head and won’t lift, we can help.

Call (423) 212-3703 or book a consultation online.

Peak Performance Wellness & Aesthetics
3980 Bristol Hwy, Johnson City, TN 37601

  • Monday – Wednesday9:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Thursday9:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Friday9:00 AM – 2:30 PM
  • Saturday – SundayClosed
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