Somewhere in the last year or two, your body started behaving like a stranger's. The weight shifted through the middle. Sleep is lighter, recall is slower, and the gap between how you're presenting and how you actually feel is real. When you've asked for answers, you've gotten reassurance: "It's perimenopause." "Your levels are within range." The conversation ends where it should be starting. Functional Root is a 100% virtual naturopathic practice. Yelena Tselenchuk, Board Certified Doctor of Holistic Health (BCDHH), Naturopath, and Homeopath, uses root-cause investigation to understand the hormone patterns driving your symptoms before any recommendation is made.

Key Takeaways

You've probably already tried something. Cycle tracking apps. Supplements. Cleaner eating. Some of it helped for a few weeks. None of it explained what was actually happening, and the symptoms kept expanding.
Do any of these sound familiar?
Weight gain through your midsection that didn't come from any obvious change in eating or activity.
Hair thinning at the temples, crown, or part line; not dramatic loss, but a shift you notice.
Hot flashes or night sweats in your late 30s or 40s that feel too early and too disruptive.
Sleep that isn't restoring you: trouble falling asleep, waking between 2 and 4 a.m., or waking exhausted after a full night.
Brain fog, slower recall, or reduced sharpness that feels different from ordinary tiredness.
Mood that's harder to regulate, quicker to feel overwhelmed, less resilient than it used to be.
Period changes: heavier, lighter, more irregular, more intense PMS, or cycles shifting without explanation.
A sense that your body is running a different program than it used to, and no one has told you why.
These aren't random symptoms. They reflect how hormone patterns shift, compound, and interact across systems. When multiple signals appear at once, patterns have causes.
Estrogen dominance, shifting progesterone, thyroid changes, cortisol involvement, gut-based hormone clearance: these aren't isolated events. When one element shifts, the others follow. Here's what we investigate.
"You're in perimenopause" is a description, not an explanation. The transition spans roughly 7 to 10 years and varies significantly between individuals. Two women can both be in perimenopause and have entirely different hormone pictures; a label that applies to all of them doesn't serve any of them.
Basic panels typically evaluate estradiol, FSH, and sometimes progesterone at a single point in time. Sex hormone levels fluctuate considerably across the cycle, so a single data point can appear normal even when the monthly rhythm is significantly disrupted. How the body processes and clears estrogens is invisible to standard testing entirely.
Hormonal birth control, antidepressants, and sleep medications are frequently offered for hormone-related symptoms without investigation into what's driving them. These approaches may reduce symptom intensity, but they don't address the underlying patterns, and in some cases alter the hormone environment in ways that make later assessment more difficult.
Hormone patterns don't exist in isolation. Estrogen and progesterone interact with thyroid function, cortisol rhythm, gut health, nutrient status, and environmental load. A systems-level assessment is the only approach that produces a complete picture. The methodology runs in four steps.
Before any testing recommendation is made, we gather the data. A comprehensive intake questionnaire captures your symptom history, timing, and context across body systems, prior testing, and current supplements or medications. A Traditional Chinese Medicine observational review (photos of the face, tongue, eyes, and nails) adds additional pattern data.
Hormone test results are only useful when interpreted against how you're actually feeling and living. The work is knowing which patterns are most likely driving your primary symptoms, and what to address in what sequence. Functional Blood Chemistry Analysis reviews existing bloodwork through a functional lens, often surfacing thyroid patterns, nutrient gaps, and inflammatory indicators standard interpretation misses.
Recommendations may include dietary adjustments, targeted supplementation, gut support for estrogen clearance, liver support for hormone processing, and guidance on endocrine disruptor reduction. These are individualized to your specific patterns, not a generic perimenopause protocol, and sequenced to match what your system is ready to address.
Hormone patterns during perimenopause are not static. Follow-up sessions allow reassessment as your body responds, retesting when appropriate, and refinement of recommendations based on how you're progressing.
The testing used for hormone investigation at Functional Root goes considerably beyond a standard hormone panel. All tests are at-home collection kits shipped directly to you, and results are reviewed in a dedicated session with Yelena Tselenchuk, BCDHH.
Evaluates estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, DHEA, and their metabolites, including the specific pathways through which estrogens are processed and cleared by the liver. Urine metabolite testing captures not just hormone levels but how your body is processing and excreting estrogens, a key variable in estrogen dominance that standard panels do not assess.
Reviews existing bloodwork (or guides you in ordering a targeted panel) through a functional medicine lens. Thyroid markers (free T3, free T4, reverse T3, and antibodies), nutrient markers, inflammatory indicators, and blood sugar patterns are evaluated at ranges associated with optimal function, not just the absence of diagnosed disease.
Evaluates burden from xenoestrogens, phthalates, and other endocrine-disrupting compounds accumulated through environmental exposure. Relevant when hormone patterns are persistent or difficult to explain through production and clearance factors alone.
Evaluates markers of bone remodeling activity and systemic oxidative stress, both relevant during perimenopause as estrogen patterns shift and their protective effects change. These markers inform the broader risk picture and help prioritize protective support strategies.