When symptoms are widespread, shifting, or difficult to explain
Inflammation is not a diagnosis. It is a physiological response that can influence multiple systems at the same time — including energy, cognition, digestion, hormones, and immune function.
What this often looks like
- Symptoms that affect multiple parts of the body
- Fluctuating or unpredictable symptom patterns
- Fatigue or reduced resilience
- Brain fog or reduced mental clarity
- Joint, muscle, or generalised discomfort
- Skin changes or sensitivities
- Increased reactivity to foods or environment
- Normal or inconclusive standard medical tests
What I investigate
- Immune system regulation and signalling
- Chronic inflammatory drivers
- Gut-immune interactions
- Environmental exposures and triggers
- Metabolic stress and energy regulation
- Infection history where relevant
- Nutritional status affecting immune balance
- Nervous system influence on immune activity
Systems that are often involved
Inflammation reflects how the immune system is interacting with other physiological systems. When regulation becomes dysbalanced, inflammatory signalling can affect multiple areas simultaneously — including metabolism, brain function, digestion, and hormonal regulation.
This is why symptoms often appear broad, variable, and difficult to attribute to a single cause.
A structured, stepwise approach
- Detailed clinical history to identify patterns and triggers
- Targeted investigations when appropriate
- Identification of underlying drivers of inflammation
- Strategies to reduce overall physiological load
- Support for immune regulation and system balance
- Ongoing refinement as symptoms stabilise
What improvement looks like
- Reduced symptom variability and unpredictability
- Improved energy and resilience
- Less reactivity to food and environmental triggers
- Greater overall physiological stability
- Improved clarity and daily function
- More consistent response to interventions
Start understanding what is driving your symptoms
If your symptoms feel widespread, inconsistent, or difficult to explain and standard investigations have not provided clear answers, a structured systems-based approach may help identify what is contributing.