Chronic fatigue is more than just being tired — it's persistent exhaustion that doesn't improve with rest. We dig deep to find the underlying causes and develop targeted treatment strategies. 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 with chronic fatigue typically present in three patterns: (1) post-viral or post-COVID patients whose energy hasn't returned to baseline; (2) women 35–55 with overlapping thyroid, hormonal, and HPA-axis dysregulation; and (3) high-functioning patients with subtle nutrient deficiencies, sleep apnea, or insulin issues that have been missed in standard care.
Patients from Scottsdale benefit from a short drive (about 25 minutes) to our Chandler clinic for comprehensive chronic fatigue care.
Post-exertional fatigue — feeling worse 24–48 hours after exercise — is a key marker we track, and pacing matters more than pushing.
Brain fog, word-finding issues, and difficulty concentrating often track alongside physical fatigue and respond to the same root-cause work.
Non-restorative sleep is one of the most common patterns; sleep architecture, sleep apnea, and circadian rhythm all matter.
Total life stress directly affects energy capacity, and reducing inputs is often as important as adding treatments.
Chronic fatigue and post-viral fatigue syndromes are recognized in the medical literature, with growing research into mitochondrial, autonomic, and immune mechanisms. Treatment evidence is still individualized rather than protocolized, and outcomes vary.
Normal tiredness improves with rest and sleep. Chronic fatigue persists for months, isn't fixed by rest, often comes with post-exertional crashes, and significantly impairs daily function. The pattern is what distinguishes it.
A useful workup typically includes a full thyroid panel, iron studies including ferritin, vitamin D and B12, a metabolic and CBC panel, sex hormones, diurnal cortisol, and inflammatory markers. We add testing for chronic infections or mitochondrial issues based on history.
Yes — post-viral fatigue syndromes including long COVID are well-documented and often involve a mix of mitochondrial, autonomic, and immune dysfunction. Treatment is individualized and often slow, but most patients improve meaningfully over time.
IV therapy is most useful when there's a confirmed deficiency or absorption issue — it isn't a stand-alone fix. Used appropriately alongside lab-driven treatment of root causes, many patients find it a meaningful adjunct.
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.