Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — Blood Spot Testing
Testing Methods and Safety
Posted by Ben White on
At-home hormone testing using saliva, dried blood spot and dried urine collection is not only more convenient than clinic-based blood draws — it is also safer, more accurate for certain hormones, and essential for capturing time-sensitive samples like waking cortisol or first-morning melatonin. This article explains how each collection method works, why dried samples carry minimal infection risk, and how ZRT Laboratory’s CLIA-certified processes ensure reliable results.
Cortisol Hormone Testing in Saliva, Blood & Urine
Posted by Ben White on
Cortisol can be measured in saliva, blood and urine — but each method tells a different story. Saliva reflects bioavailable cortisol, blood measures total output, and dried urine captures the full circadian pattern. This article explains the clinical differences and helps you choose the right test.
Ensuring an Accurate Dose: Testosterone Replacement Therapy
Posted by Ben White on
Explore why many men on topical testosterone replacement therapy may be unintentionally over-dosed due to outdated serum testing methods and misunderstood dosing principles. Learn how saliva and dried blood spot testing better reflect bioavailable testosterone delivered to tissues, why physiological dosing matters, and how excessive testosterone may suppress natural hormone production, reduce receptor sensitivity, and negatively affect long-term symptom management and hormonal balance.