When your energy crashes, cravings take over, and weight shifts without explanation, these are patterns, not personality flaws. You eat a reasonable meal and 90 minutes later you can barely keep your eyes open. The spikes, the crashes, the weight around your midsection - these aren't random. A fasting glucose number on a standard panel is one data point. It doesn't show how your body manages fuel across the day, under stress, or after meals. Functional Root is a 100% virtual naturopathic practice. Yelena Tselenchuk, BCDHH, investigates what's actually driving the pattern before any recommendation is made.

Key Takeaways

You've probably tried the obvious fixes. Cutting carbs. Skipping breakfast. Swapping the afternoon snack. Some of it worked for a week. None of it resolved the underlying pattern. You're still crashing, still reaching for something sweet, still watching weight settle where it didn't used to.
Do any of these sound familiar?
You crash hard one to two hours after eating, especially after carbs or a larger meal.
You wake up hungry or anxious, even after a full night of sleep.
Cravings for sugar or starchy foods hit at predictable times each day.
You feel jittery or irritable before meals, then foggy and sluggish after them.
Your weight has shifted, particularly around your midsection, without a clear reason.
You feel like you "need" caffeine or sugar to function in the afternoon.
Brain fog lands right after eating, when it should logically be the opposite.
You've been told your fasting glucose is "fine" but still feel like something is off.
Your body composition is changing even though your habits haven't.
These aren't isolated complaints. They form a pattern, and patterns have causes
Blood sugar symptoms are rarely about food choices alone. The more useful question isn't "what should I eat." It's "why is my body responding this way in the first place." Here's what we investigate.
Fasting glucose answers one narrow question: where did your blood sugar land on one specific morning before you ate. It reveals nothing about post-meal response, insulin output over time, or whether signaling dysfunction is already building before numbers move out of range. Many women with significant metabolic symptoms - crashes, cravings, weight gain, brain fog - show fasting glucose well within the normal range. The data point is real. It just isn't the right question.
Standard lab panels use reference ranges designed to identify disease, not to capture the functional gap between optimal and symptomatic. A fasting insulin of 12 uIU/mL is technically within range. Functionally, it indicates the body is already compensating. Functional blood chemistry uses tighter, evidence-informed optimal ranges because the goal is to identify patterns before they cross a disease threshold.
"Eat less sugar, exercise more" is accurate but incomplete. If the pattern is driven by cortisol dysregulation, gut dysfunction, or nutrient insufficiency, general dietary recommendations will have limited traction; they address the downstream effect without touching the upstream driver. The result is predictable: partial improvement, plateau, frustration. The issue isn't effort. The right data hasn't been gathered.
Blood sugar and metabolic function sit at the intersection of hormonal, digestive, neurological, and nutritional systems. An investigation that examines only one will consistently miss the fuller picture. The methodology runs in four steps.
Before any session, you complete a comprehensive intake questionnaire covering your full symptom history, dietary patterns, stress load, energy variability, and prior testing. You also submit photos for Traditional Chinese Medicine observational review (face, tongue, eyes, and nails), which reveals systemic patterns questionnaires alone can't capture. If you have recent blood work, it's reviewed with a functional interpretation lens. If not, Yelena Tselenchuk, BCDHH, provides guidance on exactly which panels to order.
Complex lab results and overlapping symptom patterns are translated into clear, prioritized findings. The focus is identifying what's most likely driving your primary symptoms, and in what order it makes sense to address them. This step clarifies which drivers are central and which are secondary, so the path forward has logical direction rather than overwhelming complexity.
Recommendations are specific to your data, your history, and your current capacity. This may include targeted nutritional adjustments, nutrient supplementation for cofactor insufficiencies, stress physiology support, and gut-directed protocols where relevant. The rationale for each recommendation is explained clearly, so you can make confident, educated decisions.
Metabolic patterns shift as underlying contributors are addressed. Follow-up work tracks what's improving, reassesses where adjustment is needed, and deepens investigation if patterns remain. The goal is steady, sustainable progress, not a one-time intervention.
Functional testing evaluates layers of metabolic function that standard testing isn't designed to assess. All tests are completed at home with kits shipped directly to you, and results are reviewed in a dedicated session with Yelena Tselenchuk, BCDHH.
Standard blood work reviewed through a functional lens - not just to rule out disease, but to assess how well metabolic, hormonal, and nutritional systems are functioning. Includes blood sugar and insulin markers, thyroid function, inflammation indicators, nutrient status, and liver function, all interpreted against optimal ranges. If you have existing blood work from the past 6-12 months, it can be submitted for functional interpretation. If not, Yelena provides guidance on exactly which panels to request.
A fasting glucose tells you one data point. A fasting insulin tells you how hard your pancreas is working to manage it. Together, evaluated alongside hemoglobin A1c and additional metabolic markers, these tests reveal fuel management patterns that single-number screening cannot capture.
Evaluates cellular metabolic function at a level standard blood panels don't reach. It assesses mitochondrial efficiency, identifies vitamin and mineral cofactor insufficiencies, evaluates gut microbial activity, and flags oxidative stress. For women whose metabolic symptoms don't fully resolve with dietary changes alone, OAT often reveals the underlying biochemical drivers that have been missed.