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Functional Medicine for Hormones: PCOS, Menopause, and More

By Dr. Laura Bennett · Endocrinologist & Obesity Medicine Editor, The GLP-1 Daily

Updated May 2026

March 23, 2026 · 4 min read

Quick Answer

  • PCOS affects 8-13% of women of reproductive age (WHO, 2024); functional medicine addresses root causes including insulin resistance, inflammation, and adrenal dysfunction
  • 75% of menopausal women experience symptoms that affect quality of life; functional medicine offers non-HRT and complementary HRT approaches
  • Functional medicine hormone testing goes beyond standard panels to include full thyroid, adrenal, sex hormone metabolites, and insulin markers
  • Treatment combines targeted supplementation, dietary protocols, stress management, and bioidentical hormones when indicated

Hormonal imbalances are one of the most common reasons patients seek functional medicine. Conventional medicine often addresses symptoms (birth control for PCOS, HRT for menopause) without investigating why hormones are disrupted. Functional medicine investigates the root causes driving hormonal dysfunction.

PCOS: The Functional Medicine Approach

Why Conventional PCOS Treatment Falls Short

Conventional PCOS treatment typically involves birth control pills (to regulate periods), metformin (for insulin resistance), and spironolactone (for androgen excess). While these manage symptoms, they don't address the underlying drivers.

Functional Medicine Root Causes of PCOS

  1. Insulin resistance: Present in 70-80% of PCOS cases, driving androgen overproduction
  2. Chronic inflammation: Elevated inflammatory markers stimulate ovarian androgen production
  3. Adrenal androgen excess: 20-30% of PCOS cases involve adrenal rather than ovarian androgen overproduction
  4. Gut dysbiosis: Impaired estrogen metabolism through the gut microbiome (estrobolome)
  5. Environmental toxins: Endocrine disruptors mimicking or blocking hormone signaling

Functional Testing for PCOS

  • Fasting insulin + HOMA-IR (not just glucose)
  • Complete hormone panel: DHEA-S, testosterone (total and free), androstenedione, SHBG
  • Full thyroid panel (thyroid and PCOS frequently overlap)
  • Inflammatory markers: hs-CRP, IL-6
  • Comprehensive stool analysis (estrobolome assessment)
  • Nutrient status: vitamin D, magnesium, zinc, B vitamins

Functional Treatment Protocol

  • Inositol (myo-inositol + D-chiro-inositol, 40:1 ratio): Improves insulin sensitivity and ovulation (meta-analysis: 65% ovulation restoration rate)
  • Anti-inflammatory diet: Low glycemic, rich in omega-3s, removing inflammatory triggers
  • Berberine: Natural insulin sensitizer with evidence comparable to metformin
  • Targeted supplementation: Vitamin D, magnesium, zinc, NAC, omega-3s
  • Stress management: Cortisol reduction to address adrenal PCOS component
  • Gut restoration: Rebalancing the microbiome to improve estrogen metabolism

Menopause: Beyond HRT

The Functional Medicine Menopause Framework

Functional medicine views menopause as a natural transition, not a disease. The goal isn't to "treat menopause" but to optimize health during and after the transition, addressing symptoms while supporting long-term bone, cardiovascular, and cognitive health.

Functional Testing for Perimenopause/Menopause

  • Complete hormone panel: Estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, DHEA-S, FSH, LH
  • Hormone metabolite testing (DUTCH test): Shows how hormones are being processed and eliminated
  • Adrenal function: Cortisol rhythm (menopause amplifies adrenal contribution)
  • Bone density markers: Vitamin D, calcium, osteocalcin
  • Cardiovascular markers: Advanced lipids, inflammation, homocysteine

Functional Treatment Approaches

Non-HRT Interventions:

  • Black cohosh: Evidence-based for hot flash reduction (Cochrane review)
  • Phytoestrogens: Isoflavones from soy/red clover (modest evidence for symptom relief)
  • Adaptogenic herbs: Ashwagandha, maca, rhodiola for stress and energy
  • Magnesium: Sleep support, bone health, mood
  • Omega-3s: Cardiovascular protection, mood support, anti-inflammatory

Bioidentical Hormone Therapy (when indicated): Functional medicine practitioners who prescribe hormones typically use bioidentical formulations (structurally identical to human hormones):

  • Estradiol patches or pellets
  • Micronized progesterone
  • Testosterone (low-dose for libido, energy, muscle)
  • DHEA supplementation

Lifestyle Foundations:

  • Strength training for bone density and metabolic health
  • Mediterranean or anti-inflammatory dietary pattern
  • Sleep optimization (melatonin, magnesium, sleep hygiene)
  • Stress management (cortisol becomes more impactful post-menopause)

Thyroid Dysfunction

The thyroid is central to hormonal health. Functional medicine's approach to thyroid testing goes well beyond the standard TSH-only screening. See our dedicated thyroid guide for details on functional thyroid evaluation and treatment.

Adrenal Health and Cortisol

Chronic stress disrupts the entire hormonal cascade through HPA axis dysfunction:

  • Elevated cortisol steals pregnenolone from sex hormone production ("pregnenolone steal")
  • Adrenal fatigue/dysfunction affects thyroid, sex hormones, and insulin sensitivity
  • 4-point salivary cortisol testing maps your daily cortisol rhythm
  • Treatment focuses on stress management, adaptogenic herbs, and lifestyle optimization

Frequently Asked Questions

Can functional medicine cure PCOS?

PCOS is a lifelong condition, but functional medicine can significantly improve or resolve symptoms — including restoring regular ovulation, reducing androgen levels, and managing insulin resistance — by addressing root causes. Many patients achieve symptom remission and even fertility without pharmaceutical intervention.

Is bioidentical HRT safer than conventional HRT?

The evidence is nuanced. Bioidentical hormones (particularly transdermal estradiol and micronized progesterone) may have a better safety profile than some synthetic hormones, particularly regarding cardiovascular and breast cancer risk. However, all hormone therapy carries some risk and should be individualized. Discuss with your practitioner.

How long does functional medicine treatment for hormones take?

Initial improvement in symptoms is often seen within 4-8 weeks. Full hormonal optimization typically takes 3-6 months. Some conditions (PCOS with insulin resistance) may take 6-12 months for full improvement. Ongoing maintenance through diet and lifestyle is important for sustained results.

Does insurance cover functional medicine hormone testing?

Standard hormone tests (TSH, estradiol, testosterone) are often covered. Specialized functional tests (DUTCH test, comprehensive adrenal panels, hormone metabolites) are typically not covered by insurance. HSA/FSA funds can be used. See our insurance guide.

Can men benefit from functional medicine hormone treatment?

Absolutely. Testosterone decline, thyroid issues, cortisol dysfunction, and metabolic hormonal disruption affect men as well. Functional medicine evaluates the full hormonal picture for men, including testosterone metabolism, estrogen levels, thyroid function, and cortisol patterns.

The Bottom Line

Hormonal health is a cornerstone of functional medicine. By investigating root causes — insulin resistance, inflammation, gut dysfunction, adrenal stress, and environmental toxins — functional medicine addresses the WHY behind hormonal imbalances rather than just masking symptoms with medications.

For more on functional medicine, see our complete guide.

-- The Functional Doctor Finder Team

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