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What is Functional Medicine?
Functional Medicine is an approach to
healing that addresses imbalances in an individual’s
biochemistry and physiology that can lead or already may
have led to chronic disease. Chronic disease states do not
appear overnight; they are often the result of prolonged
states of imbalance that go unnoticed or undetected for
years before symptoms of the disease actually manifest.
Returning patients to health requires reversing, or
substantially improving, the specific imbalances that have
contributed to the disease state.
Some key principles of Functional
Medicine include:
- Each person possesses his/her own biochemical
individuality that results from a unique interplay
between genetics, the environment, nutrition, stress,
and emotions, as well as other lifestyle factors.
- Care focuses on the patient who has the disease –
not the disease that the patient has.
- No organ system operates in isolation; there is a
web-like connection between all the systems in the body,
including the mind and spirit.
- Understanding and treating the underlying cause of
dysfunction and disease is much more effective than just
treating the symptoms of the disease.
- True health is experienced as a sense of vitality
and energy; not just the absence of disease. Every
effort is made to support the body by giving it what it
needs to function optimally, and/or taking away what may
be harming it or draining its energy reserves.
- Focus is on restoring health and function, not just
controlling symptoms.
There are several core imbalances that
the Functional Medicine practitioner may evaluate during
his/her assessment of the patient. These include imbalances
in hormones and neurotransmitters; energy production;
detoxification; digestion, absorption and elimination
capacities; the immune system; the level of inflammation in
the body; and structural imbalances all the way from the
cell membranes to the muscles and bones.
The evaluation also includes a very
detailed history, physical examination, and when necessary,
specific testing of blood, urine, stool, and /or saliva in
order to gain detailed information about the individual’s
core imbalances. Treatment plans are tailored to each
patient based on all the information gathered from the
comprehensive evaluation. Diet and nutrition, vitamin,
mineral, and herbal supplements, stress management,
exercise, along with appropriate conventional medications,
are important therapeutic tools used by the Functional
Medicine practitioner.
Many chronic disorders can be
effectively treated with a Functional Medicine approach,
including, but not limited to:
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Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder (ADHD)
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Adrenal Fatigue
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Anxiety
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Arthritis (Osteoarthritis and
Rheumatoid Arthritis)
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Asthma
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Autism
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Asperger’s Syndrome
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Candidiasis (Yeast overgrowth)
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Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
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Cardiovascular Disease
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Depression
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Diabetes Mellitus
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Eczema
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Fatigue
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Fibromyalgia
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Food allergies
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Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD)
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Headaches
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Hypertension
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Inflammatory Bowel Disease
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome
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Insomnia
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Menopause
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Metabolic Syndrome
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Obesity
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Osteoporosis
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Perimenopause
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Sinusitis
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Vitamin and mineral deficiencies
Functional Medicine is a holistic,
personalized, and scientific approach to care that
incorporates knowledge across medical disciplines. It is a
very effective approach to treating chronic problems,
particularly when conventional approaches have failed.
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