Your Concern

Low Energy & Fatigue

Restore your vitality from the inside out

Understanding Your Concern

About Low Energy & Fatigue

Chronic fatigue and persistent low energy infiltrate every part of your life—work performance, relationships, exercise motivation, even your appearance. Many patients dismiss it as normal aging or stress, but persistent fatigue often has identifiable underlying causes. With comprehensive clinical training, we investigate root causes rather than just treating symptoms. Fatigue typically stems from hormonal imbalances (thyroid, testosterone, estrogen, cortisol), nutritional deficiencies (B12, iron, folate, vitamin D, magnesium), poor sleep quality, chronic inflammation, or mitochondrial dysfunction. Our approach is systematic: comprehensive lab work to identify deficiencies, lifestyle optimization, and aesthetic treatments that help you look and feel revitalized. Microneedling and skin rejuvenation can restore a vibrant appearance even when energy levels are recovering. Results are gradual, typically improving over 4–8 weeks as baseline levels normalize.

Common Causes

  • Hormonal imbalances (thyroid, testosterone, estrogen, cortisol, growth hormone)
  • Nutritional deficiencies (B12, folate, iron, ferritin, vitamin D, magnesium, coenzyme Q10)
  • Poor sleep quality or undiagnosed sleep disorders
  • Chronic stress and elevated cortisol (adrenal dysfunction)
  • Chronic inflammation and oxidative stress
  • Mitochondrial dysfunction and cellular energy decline
  • Underlying medical conditions (anemia, hypothyroidism, diabetes, autoimmune disease)

Ready to Address This?

Schedule a consultation to discuss your low energy & fatigue concerns with Dr. Shirazi.

Questions?

(858) 633-5991

Tips from Dr. Azi

  • 1

    Sleep 7–9 hours nightly; sleep is when your body repairs and restores itself—prioritize it

  • 2

    Get comprehensive hormone testing (TSH, free T3, T4, testosterone, cortisol, DHEA) and nutritional labs

  • 3

    Manage stress through meditation, breathwork, exercise, or therapy; chronic stress tanks energy

  • 4

    Get tested for nutrient deficiencies; low B12, iron, and vitamin D are energy killers

  • 5

    Exercise regularly, especially resistance training; it builds muscle and improves mitochondrial function

  • 6

    Eat a nutrient-dense diet with plenty of protein, healthy fats, and colorful vegetables

  • 7

    Limit alcohol and caffeine dependence; they disrupt sleep and hormone balance

  • 8

    If energy doesn't improve with lifestyle changes, see a physician who orders comprehensive labs

Book Now

Discuss Your Low Energy & Fatigue Concerns

The $100 consultation fee is credited toward your first treatment.