Some of our Test Coverage tools (at present, Java, C# and COBOL) are designed to handle this kind of thing.
If you run your application and exercise a particular function, you can use these test coverage tools to collect code coverage data for that particular functionality. In essence, this is a record of all code which the functionality exercises. With some minor scripting, you can arrange for each functinonality test to run and obtain code coverage data for that test.
The collected test coverage vectors can be combined into a summary vector by the tool, that will give you code coverage number for your code based on the entire set of functionality tests.
If you change the code base, the test coverage tool will tell you which blocks of code have changed (it compares at the method level for differences). This in turn can be applied to the test coverage vectors already collected for individual functionalities; if there's an intersection, you need to run the functional test again, as the code on which it depended has changed.
This way you can decide which functionalities need to be re-tested after a change.