Adrenal fatigue occurs when chronic stress depletes your body's ability to produce adequate cortisol and other stress hormones. Our naturopathic approach restores balance from the inside out. Our clinic is conveniently located near Scottsdale in Chandler, AZ, offering patients from Scottsdale access to advanced, non-surgical treatment options.
Scottsdale residents typically reach our office in 25–35 minutes via the Loop 101 Pima Freeway south to the Loop 202. Scottsdale patients are often serious recreational golfers, hikers from the McDowell Preserve, and an aesthetics- and longevity-focused demographic seeking hormone optimization, regenerative orthopedics, and integrative anti-aging care.
Scottsdale has one of the densest concentrations of premium golf courses in the country — TPC Scottsdale, Troon North, Grayhawk, and Silverleaf among them — plus hiking at Pinnacle Peak and Tom's Thumb, road cycling out of north Scottsdale, and a strong boutique fitness, Pilates, and yoga ecosystem in Old Town and DC Ranch.
We regularly see patients from Old Town, DC Ranch, McCormick Ranch, Grayhawk, Troon, and Gainey Ranch.
Patients describing 'adrenal fatigue' usually fall into three groups: (1) high-output professionals or parents in their 30s–50s running on caffeine and willpower; (2) endurance athletes and overtrainers with eroded recovery, sleep, and motivation; and (3) post-illness or post-major-stress patients whose energy never quite returned to baseline.
Patients from Scottsdale benefit from a short drive (about 25 minutes) to our Chandler clinic for comprehensive adrenal fatigue care.
Disrupted sleep — especially difficulty falling asleep or waking at 2–4am — is one of the most common patterns we see and a primary treatment target.
Endurance athletes often unknowingly worsen the picture with chronic high-intensity training; programmed deloads are part of recovery.
Mid-afternoon crashes and morning fog often reflect cortisol rhythm disruption rather than simple sleep debt.
Subjective stress tolerance — 'small things feel big' — is often the first thing patients report changing as the HPA axis rebalances.
The conventional medical community does not recognize 'adrenal fatigue' as a discrete diagnosis, but HPA-axis dysregulation, disrupted cortisol rhythms, and the downstream effects of chronic stress are well-documented. We treat the underlying physiology and lifestyle drivers rather than a syndrome label.
'Adrenal fatigue' is not a recognized endocrine disease the way Addison's disease is. What we're often actually treating is HPA-axis dysregulation — disrupted cortisol rhythm and stress response — which is real and measurable, even though the popular term oversimplifies the biology.
We typically use a diurnal cortisol pattern (morning, midday, evening, bedtime) via saliva or urine, sometimes paired with DHEA-S and key nutrient and hormone markers. A single morning serum cortisol — the standard primary-care test — only catches the most extreme cases.
Burnout is a psychological and behavioral construct; HPA-axis dysregulation is the physiological pattern that often accompanies it. They overlap heavily, and treating one usually requires addressing the other.
Most patients see meaningful improvement in energy, sleep, and stress tolerance within 6–12 weeks of a structured plan. Full recovery — especially for long-standing cases — usually unfolds over 3–6 months.
We treat the underlying problem, not just symptoms.
Your treatment plan is based on what works, not what's covered.
Scottsdale residents typically reach our office in 25–35 minutes via the Loop 101 Pima Freeway south to the Loop 202.
Led by Dr. Kelly Romero, NMD, with a team of specialists.
Book a free 30-minute consultation. We'll review your history, discuss your goals, and recommend the right treatment plan.