I'm a clinical pharmacist. I help people with mast cell activation syndrome map what's actually triggering their symptoms, see what's bringing real relief, and find out whether the medications and supplements they're taking are helping — or quietly making it worse.
Request an IntroductionYou've likely been bounced between specialists, handed conflicting advice, and left to assemble your own understanding from research papers and forums at midnight. The reactions feel unpredictable, the triggers feel endless, and no one seems to be looking at the whole picture with you.
There's almost always a pattern underneath the chaos. Finding it is the difference between reacting to symptoms and actually understanding what sets them off.
Most appointments are 15 minutes, and most clinicians have limited experience with MCAS. By default, you've become your own researcher, case manager, and record-keeper.
Every antihistamine, stabilizer, and supplement is acting on an already-hyperreactive system. Even inactive ingredients — dyes, fillers, binders — can provoke mast cells directly. Without someone tracking the whole regimen, it's easy to be adding noise.
What's gentle and well-tolerated for most people can be a genuine trigger for you. Advice that ignores your specific reactivity isn't just unhelpful — it can set you back.
This is a focused, one-on-one clinical session built around understanding your situation — not a quick scan, not a generic protocol, and not a chatbot summary. We work through everything you're experiencing and everything you're taking, and turn it into something you can actually use.
MCAS rarely travels alone. Most people living with it are on a stack of antihistamines, mast cell stabilizers, supplements, and medications for overlapping conditions — and every one of those is acting on a system that's already on high alert.
Pharmacists study drug mechanisms, interactions, and even excipients — the dyes, fillers, and binders inside a pill — at a depth no other clinician does, because it's the entire focus of our training. That means I can often spot the medication or supplement that may be quietly aggravating the exact thing you're trying to calm. It's the kind of detail a rushed visit almost never catches, and it's where a pharmacist's lens is genuinely different.
What I offer is the piece that's usually missing: a clinician who takes the time to understand your specific picture and hands you a clear, usable map — so your own decisions, and your conversations with your prescribers, get sharper and more confident.
This works best for people who are already taking their health seriously and want a clinical eye on the details no one else has had time to examine.
You've been diagnosed with MCAS — or strongly suspect it — and want a clinical eye on the whole picture
You're taking multiple medications and supplements, and no one has reviewed them together as a single system
You're tired of trial-and-error and want to understand what's actually driving your reactions
You want a clinician who will take the time — not another rushed, 15-minute appointment
[ YOUR NAME ], PharmD — I'm a Doctor of Pharmacy with clinical experience across medication management, chronic and complex conditions, and preventive care. My focus is helping people make better long-term sense of what they're taking, so every medication and supplement is working for them rather than against them.
I came to mast cell activation syndrome the way many of my clients did: by following the evidence upstream, past the surface symptoms, to the mechanisms underneath. Pharmacists are among the most underutilized clinicians in healthcare — and for a condition as medication-entangled as MCAS, that lens is exactly what's been missing.
No commitment and no sales pitch. We'll talk through your situation and figure out together whether this is the right fit.
Request an IntroductionCurrently available to clients located in Arizona.