Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — menopausal transition

Perimenopause, Symptoms and Treatment

Posted by Ben White on

Perimenopause, also known as the menopausal transition, is a natural and normal part of a woman's life. It refers to the years leading up to menopause, which is defined as the point at which a woman has not had a menstrual period for 12 consecutive months. Perimenopause typically begins in a woman's 40s but can start as early as the mid-30s. During perimenopause, the body's production of estrogen and progesterone, two hormones essential to a woman's reproductive system, begins to decline. This decline can cause a range of symptoms, including hot flashes, night sweats, mood swings, sleep disturbances, vaginal dryness,...

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Vitex Agnus-Castus: Botanical Support for Female Hormone Imbalance

Posted by Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team on

Vitex agnus-castus — also known as chasteberry or chaste tree berry — is one of the most widely used botanical remedies for female hormone imbalance. Clinical research supports its use for reducing elevated prolactin, correcting luteal phase progesterone deficiency, alleviating PMS and PMDD symptoms, and managing some symptoms of the menopausal transition. This article reviews the evidence behind Vitex, explains the hormonal mechanisms through which it works, and outlines when it may be an appropriate botanical option for women with menstrual cycle disturbances.

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Heat Waves & Hot Flashes

Posted by Ben White on

Hot flashes and night sweats affect up to 80% of women during perimenopause — but they are not inevitable, and they are not forever. The root cause is hormonal imbalance, particularly the out-of-sync fluctuation of oestrogen and progesterone as the ovaries begin to wind down. Discover the lifestyle changes, natural supplements and hormone testing strategies that can bring real relief.

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Menopause and Perimenopause

Posted by Ben White on

Perimenopause is far more than a reproductive transition — it is fundamentally neurological. As oestradiol declines, the brain’s bioenergetic system becomes compromised, neurotransmitter balance shifts, and the thermoneutral zone narrows, giving rise to hot flashes, mood instability, memory changes and sleep disruption. This article explores the neuroscience behind the menopausal transition and why hormone replacement therapy — timed correctly — may be the most effective intervention.

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