Functional Medicine Support for Autoimmune Disease
A root-cause approach that looks at gut health, inflammation, food reactions, nutrient status, stress physiology, infections, and environmental triggers that may be keeping the immune system activated.
Autoimmune disease doesn’t happen in a vacuum.
Your immune system is responding to something. The question is: what’s keeping it fired up?
At Vital Source Functional Medicine, we help clients with autoimmune disease look beyond the diagnosis and start investigating the terrain underneath it: gut health, food triggers, infections, nutrient deficiencies, blood sugar, stress load, sleep, hormones, environmental exposures, and chronic inflammation.
The goal isn’t to suppress every symptom and ignore the signal.
The goal is to understand why the immune system is overactive and build a plan that supports the body from the ground up.
Conventional care is often focused on diagnosing the autoimmune disease, tracking antibodies or inflammatory markers, and using medication to control symptoms or immune activity.
That can be necessary. But it’s not the whole conversation.
Many clients are still left wondering:
Why did this start?
Why are my symptoms flaring?
Why do I feel inflamed even when my labs are “fine”?
Why do my gut, skin, joints, hormones, and energy all seem connected?
What can I actually do to support my body?
Functional medicine doesn’t replace necessary medical care. It fills in the gap that’s often ignored: the root-cause terrain.
Autoimmune Patterns We Commonly See
We work with clients who have diagnosed autoimmune conditions, suspected autoimmune patterns, or inflammatory symptoms that need a deeper look.
Common conditions and patterns include:
Hashimoto’s thyroiditis
Graves’ disease
Celiac disease
Psoriasis
Rheumatoid arthritis patterns
Lupus-like patterns
Inflammatory bowel disease patterns
Positive ANA or autoimmune markers
Chronic joint pain or stiffness
Unexplained inflammation
Skin flares
Gut symptoms with immune activation
Fatigue, brain fog, and poor recovery
Food reactions or increased sensitivity
The diagnosis matters. But the diagnosis isn’t the whole story.
What We Look For Beneath Autoimmune Disease
Autoimmune disease is complex. There’s no single cause and no one-size-fits-all protocol.
But there are common patterns that can keep the immune system irritated, reactive, and overactive.
Gut Health + Intestinal Permeability
The gut is one of the biggest regulators of immune function. Dysbiosis, gut inflammation, low digestive capacity, infections, food reactions, and intestinal permeability can all contribute to immune stress.
Stress Physiology
Chronic stress changes immune signaling, blood sugar, cortisol patterns, sleep quality, gut function, and inflammation. Stress isn’t “just emotional.” It’s biological.
Food Reactions + Immune Activation
Gluten, dairy, processed foods, high-sugar diets, and individual food triggers can drive inflammation in some clients. The goal isn’t random restriction. The goal is identifying what’s actually creating stress in your system.
Blood Sugar + Metabolic Inflammation
Blood sugar swings, insulin resistance, excess processed foods, and poor protein intake can drive inflammatory signaling and make the body less resilient.
Environmental Triggers
Mold, heavy metals, plastics, pesticides, solvents, fragrances, and other environmental exposures may increase the body’s inflammatory burden when the history points in that direction.
Nutrient Deficiencies
Vitamin D, zinc, selenium, magnesium, omega-3 fats, iron, B vitamins, and other nutrients play important roles in immune regulation, thyroid function, tissue repair, detoxification, and inflammation control.
Infections + Immune Burden
Past or current infections may contribute to immune activation in some clients. This can include gut infections, viral patterns, oral health issues, and other chronic immune stressors.
Sleep + Circadian Rhythm
Poor sleep weakens immune regulation, raises inflammatory load, affects hormones, and reduces repair. Sleep isn’t optional when dealing with autoimmunity.
The Gut Is Often One of the First Places We Look
Your immune system and gut are deeply connected.
A large part of immune activity is located in and around the gut. That means digestion, microbiome balance, intestinal barrier function, food reactions, stool patterns, inflammation, and nutrient absorption all matter.
This is especially important in autoimmune patterns like Hashimoto’s, celiac disease, psoriasis, inflammatory bowel patterns, rheumatoid-type symptoms, and chronic inflammatory issues.
If the gut is irritated, inflamed, or imbalanced, the immune system may stay on high alert.
That’s why gut health isn’t a side conversation in autoimmune disease. It’s often central.
Signs Your Immune System May Be Under Stress
Clients often come to us with symptoms like:
Fatigue that doesn’t match their lifestyle
Brain fog
Joint pain or stiffness
Muscle aches
Skin flares
Digestive symptoms
Food reactions
Swelling or puffiness
Headaches
Hair shedding
Poor recovery
Hormone changes
Anxiety or mood shifts
Frequent illness
Lab markers that don’t match how they feel
Symptoms that flare after stress, poor sleep, certain foods, or illness
These symptoms don’t automatically mean you have autoimmune disease. But they do tell us your body is asking for a deeper investigation.
Functional Testing Can Help Us Stop Guessing
When appropriate, lab testing can help us understand what’s driving immune stress and inflammation.
Testing may include:
Comprehensive blood chemistry
Thyroid panel with thyroid antibodies
Inflammatory markers
Nutrient markers
Iron panel and ferritin
Blood sugar and insulin markers
Celiac screening when appropriate
Stool testing for gut health, pathogens, inflammation, and digestive markers
Organic acids testing
Food sensitivity or immune reactivity testing
Hormone testing when relevant
Mold or environmental testing when history supports it
We don’t believe in running every test possible.
We believe in asking better questions, choosing the right tools, and using the information to build a smarter plan.
What Autoimmune Support May Look Like
Your plan depends on your history, symptoms, labs, diagnosis, lifestyle, and goals.
Support may include:
Anti-inflammatory nutrition
Gluten-free support when appropriate
Gut healing strategies
Microbiome support
Digestive support
Blood sugar stabilization
Nutrient repletion
Sleep and circadian rhythm work
Stress physiology and nervous system support
Environmental cleanup
Targeted supplementation
Food reaction investigation
Lifestyle rhythm and habit support
Follow-up testing when needed
This isn’t about chasing perfection. It’s about lowering the total burden on the body so the immune system has less reason to stay on high alert.
We Don’t Treat Autoimmune Disease Like a Random Attack
The standard story is that the immune system is confused and attacking the body.
That may describe what’s happening. But it doesn’t explain why.
We want to know what’s irritating the immune system. What’s depleting the body. What’s disrupting the gut. What’s driving inflammation. What’s interfering with repair.
That’s where the real work begins.
There’s no universal autoimmune protocol. Some clients need gut work. Some need blood sugar support. Some need nutrient repletion. Some need stress and sleep work. Some need to investigate mold, infections, or food reactions. Most need some combination.
The plan has to match the person.
How to Get Started
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We review your child’s health history, symptoms, diet, digestion, sleep, behavior patterns, environment, previous labs, medications, supplements, and your biggest concerns.
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If testing makes sense, we choose the labs that are most relevant to your child’s case. This may include blood work, stool testing, organic acids testing, nutrient markers, or other functional testing.
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We review findings and build a plan around food, gut health, nutrients, sleep, lifestyle, environmental factors, and targeted supplementation when appropriate.
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We track what changes, what does not, and what needs to be adjusted. Kids are dynamic. The plan should be too.
Frequently Asked Questions
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We don’t claim to cure autoimmune disease. Functional medicine focuses on identifying and supporting the underlying patterns that may contribute to immune stress, inflammation, and symptom flares.
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No. Medication decisions should be made with your prescribing provider. Functional medicine can work alongside conventional care by focusing on nutrition, gut health, nutrient status, sleep, stress, lifestyle, and environmental factors.
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Yes. Hashimoto’s is one of the most common autoimmune patterns we see. We look at thyroid labs, thyroid antibodies, nutrient status, gut health, blood sugar, stress, sleep, and potential immune triggers.
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Sometimes. Gluten can be a major immune trigger for some people, especially in celiac disease or certain autoimmune patterns. But the goal isn’t random restriction. The goal is identifying what’s actually relevant for your body.
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It depends on the case. Testing may include comprehensive blood chemistry, thyroid antibodies, inflammatory markers, nutrient markers, stool testing, organic acids testing, food sensitivity testing, hormone testing, or environmental testing when appropriate.
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Yes. Vital Source Functional Medicine offers virtual consults for clients who are a good fit for our care model.
Ready to Look Beneath the Autoimmune Diagnosis?
If you have autoimmune disease, positive antibodies, chronic inflammation, or symptoms that keep coming back, your body is giving you information.
You don’t need more random advice.
You need a clear investigation, a better plan, and a way to support the body from the foundations up.