Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — menopause and memory loss
Early Menopause Warning Signs Every Woman Should Know
Posted by Behcet Bicakci on
Early menopause can cause a wide range of physical and emotional symptoms long before menopause officially begins. Learn the most common warning signs, including irregular periods, hot flashes, mood changes, sleep problems, fatigue, and hormonal imbalances, and discover when hormone testing may help provide answers.
Early Menopause & Surgical Menopause: One Woman's Story and What You Need to Know
Posted by Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team on
Early menopause affects around 5% of women aged 40 to 45, yet it is frequently misdiagnosed or dismissed. Surgical menopause — triggered by removal of both ovaries — can occur at any age and brings an abrupt loss of both oestrogen and testosterone. This article combines a first-person account of early and surgical menopause with a clinical overview of causes, health risks, and the importance of comprehensive hormone testing. Whether your menopause arrived early, unexpectedly, or surgically, understanding your hormone status is the essential first step towards effective, personalised treatment.
Of Seahorses & Menopause
Posted by Ben White on
Many women going through menopause notice changes in their ability to remember things — and this is not just in their heads. A small, seahorse-shaped structure in the brain called the hippocampus is highly dependent on estrogen for synaptic plasticity, memory formation and neuroprotection. In this article, Margaret Groves of ZRT Laboratory explains the science behind menopause-related memory changes, why estrogen receptor expression declines with age, and why the “window of opportunity” for hormone replacement is critical to preserving cognitive function.
Banishing the 7 Dwarves of Menopause
Posted by Ben White on
Itchy, Bitchy, Sweaty, Sleepy, Bloated, Forgetful and All Dried Up — the seven dwarves of menopause are all too real for millions of women. But these symptoms aren’t inevitable. Undetected hormone imbalances are behind most of them, and testing is the first step to getting your good menopause back.