
The phrase shows up everywhere now. Root cause medicine. Root cause healing. Address the root cause, not the symptom.
But when you actually sit across from a patient with five years of unexplained fatigue, gut problems, and mood swings, what does “root cause” mean in practice? What does a provider actually do differently?
Here’s what the words mean on the ground.
It Starts by Refusing the Easy Answer
A 46-year-old woman comes in tired, bloated, and struggling to lose weight. Her previous doctors ordered basic labs. Everything came back normal. They suggested she sleep more, manage stress, maybe try an antidepressant.
A root cause approach starts with a different question: normal compared to what?
Standard labs measure whether you have a disease. They’re not designed to catch the space between thriving and being sick. A TSH in range doesn’t tell you whether your thyroid is converting hormones adequately. A cortisol within reference range doesn’t tell you what your cortisol is doing at 2 a.m. when you can’t sleep.
Root cause medicine expands the measurement. Full thyroid panels. Hormone mapping through the day. Comprehensive metabolic markers. Nutrient levels. Inflammatory indicators. A detailed health history that asks not just what symptoms are present, but when they started, what changed around that time, and what else was happening in the patient’s life.
The point is to build a complete picture before drawing conclusions.
The Goldfish Analogy
Colin Renaud, DC, PA-C, who has practiced functional medicine for over ten years, uses an image that lands with patients:
“If you have a goldfish and the tank is dirty, what do you do? You change the water. You don’t medicate the fish.”
That’s the root cause shift in one sentence. Conventional medicine, in many cases, is focused on the fish. It manages the symptoms. It prescribes something to reduce the discomfort. But the water, the conditions creating the problem, doesn’t change.
Root cause medicine asks what’s in the tank.
Is the gut inflamed? Are sex hormones deficient? Is the cortisol system running on empty from years of chronic stress? Is there a nutritional deficiency that nobody measured because it wasn’t on the standard panel? Is there a connection between a traumatic event fifteen years ago and a nervous system that never fully calmed down?
All of these are water problems. You can manage the symptoms indefinitely without ever changing the water. Or you can change the water.
Why Conventional Medicine Doesn’t Go There
It’s worth being honest about why the conventional system doesn’t practice root cause medicine more often.
Visits average 7 to 10 minutes. A provider can’t work through 30 possible causes of fatigue in that time. Insurance pays for what it covers, and it covers treatments for diagnosed conditions. It doesn’t pay for an investigation into why someone doesn’t feel well when nothing shows up on a standard test.
The result is a feedback loop. Patients leave without answers. They come back with the same symptoms. They’re offered the same narrow set of options. They either accept that this is just how they feel, or they start looking elsewhere.
Root cause medicine doesn’t fix this by being smarter than conventional providers. It fixes it by spending more time, running more complete testing, and operating outside the reimbursement system that limits what gets investigated.
The Mind-Body Problem Conventional Medicine Ignores
One of the most underrecognized root causes in medicine is the long-term physiological impact of stress and trauma.
This is not a psychological claim. It’s an anatomical one.
When the body experiences a significant stressor, the autonomic nervous system shifts into fight-or-flight. This is normal. The problem arises when that response becomes chronic. The body stays in sympathetic overdrive. Cortisol stays elevated. Digestion is suppressed. The immune system is suppressed. Reproductive hormones are dysregulated.
Over years, the adrenal glands run low. Cortisol that was chronically high becomes chronically depleted. The patient can’t get out of bed without multiple alarms and several cups of coffee. They’re exhausted but can’t sleep. They have gut problems that no gastroenterologist can explain.
The vagus nerve connects the nervous system to the gut directly. When the nervous system is in chronic sympathetic overdrive, gut function degrades. Stomach acid decreases. Digestive enzymes drop. The microbiome shifts toward inflammation.
A gastroenterologist sees a gut problem and treats the gut. A root cause provider asks why the gut is malfunctioning and traces the answer back to the nervous system, and sometimes further back to a period of severe stress or an unresolved traumatic experience.
This is not philosophy. This is measurable physiology. Salivary cortisol testing can map the daily cortisol curve. It can show whether the adrenals are burned out. It can connect a patient’s inability to get through the day to a documented pattern of cortisol depletion.
There’s no pill that fixes trauma. But there are tools: cortisol testing, nervous system support, nutrition optimization, sleep improvement, and a provider who understands how these pieces connect.
A Real Example of What This Looks Like
A patient presented with years of complex chronic illness. She had seen Lyme specialists, immunologists, mold specialists. Everyone had a partial answer. Nobody had the complete picture.
After building trust with her provider over several months, she revealed that her symptoms had started after she was sexually assaulted.
There it was. Not Lyme disease. Not mold. A nervous system that had been locked in a state of threat for years, driving cascading dysfunction throughout her body.
The treatment wasn’t a supplement protocol. It was helping her understand the connection, supporting her nervous system with every available functional tool, referring her to trauma therapy, and rebuilding the physiological foundation: nutrition, sleep, cortisol support, hormone optimization.
Did she recover quickly? No. Chronic nervous system dysregulation takes time to unwind.
But the trajectory changed. Because the cause had finally been identified.
Root Cause Means Different Things for Different People
This is the part that gets left out of most summaries of functional medicine.
Root cause is not a universal category. It’s a question that gets answered differently for every patient.
For one person, the root cause of fatigue is a vitamin D level of 8 when optimal is 70 to 80. For another, it’s low testosterone that has been declining for a decade. For someone else, it’s a thyroid that’s producing T4 but not converting it to the active T3 form because of gut dysfunction.
For someone else still, it’s a decade of unresolved grief that has kept the stress hormones elevated long past the point where the body can compensate.
None of these have the same solution. That’s why root cause medicine requires time and comprehensive assessment. You can’t guess at the root cause from a 10-minute visit and a standard panel. You have to build a picture.
What Changes When the Root Cause Is Found
The patients who describe this process most vividly often say some version of the same thing: “Why has no one ever said this to me?”
When Colin Renaud, DC, PA-C explains to a patient that their afternoon energy crash is a blood sugar problem driven by low testosterone and a high-carb lunch, and that this is straightforward physiology, the reaction is often disbelief. Not because the information is surprising. Because it’s obvious. Because once explained, it makes perfect sense.
That moment matters. A patient who understands why their body is doing what it’s doing can make different choices. They become a participant in their care rather than a recipient of instructions they don’t understand.
That’s not an outcome conventional medicine is set up to produce, not because the providers don’t care, but because the structure doesn’t allow it.
Root cause medicine, at its best, gives patients that explanation. It connects what’s happening in their body to why it’s happening, and then it builds a plan that addresses the cause, not just the symptom.
The goldfish gets clean water. And it starts to thrive.
About the Author: This article was written by the clinical education team at Med Matrix, a functional medicine clinic in South Portland, Maine. Med Matrix serves over 3,000 patients with a provider team that specializes in root-cause testing, hormone optimization, and personalized treatment plans.
