Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — Iodine Deficiency
Iodine Deficiency: Causes, Symptoms & How to Test Your Levels
Posted by Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team on
Iodine deficiency is a significant and underappreciated global health problem, with urinary iodine levels in many Western populations having fallen substantially over recent decades. As an essential component of thyroid hormones, iodine deficiency impairs thyroid function, promotes goitre, and has wide-ranging consequences for metabolism, cognitive development, breast health, and reproductive health. Women of childbearing age are particularly vulnerable. This article explains the causes and consequences of iodine deficiency, who is most at risk, and how at-home dried urine testing using ICP-MS analysis can accurately confirm your iodine status.
Where Does Dietary Iodine Come From? Foods, Deficiency & Testing
Posted by Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team on
Iodine is an essential trace element required for thyroid hormone production, yet many people are unknowingly deficient. While iodised salt and seafood are well-known sources, dairy products, eggs, and seaweed also contribute significantly to daily intake. Changing dietary habits — including reduced milk consumption and the replacement of iodine with bromine in bread production — are quietly lowering iodine intake across the population. This article explains where dietary iodine comes from, why the body needs it, how it is absorbed and excreted, and how at-home urine testing can confirm whether your intake is adequate.
Environmental Elements and Your Thyroid Health
Posted by Ben White on
Environmental pollutants are in the food we eat, the air we breathe and the water we drink — and in excess, they can profoundly disrupt thyroid hormone synthesis and action. This article explains how iodine and selenium deficiencies develop, how antagonists like bromine, arsenic and mercury exacerbate thyroid dysfunction, and why urine testing for these five elements can reveal the hidden environmental drivers of thyroid symptoms that standard blood tests miss.
How to Assess Iodine Deficiency
Posted by Ben White on
Iodine deficiency is more common than many realise. This guide walks through how to assess iodine status using dietary recall, symptom profiling, and a three-part laboratory panel — including thyroid function, thyroglobulin, and urinary iodine and bromine testing.
How to Treat Iodine Deficiency: Guide
Posted by Ben White on
Once iodine deficiency is confirmed through laboratory assessment, choosing the right supplement form is critical. This guide explains the difference between iodide and molecular iodine, how to dose safely, what to consider with Hashimoto's, and how to monitor your progress with at-home hormone testing.