Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — cortisol and thyroid

Understanding Thyroid Hormone Imbalance: A Hidden Health Epidemic

Posted by Behcet Bicakci on

The thyroid gland may be small, but it plays a monumental role in maintaining your body’s health. Located in the neck and shaped like a butterfly, this endocrine powerhouse regulates everything from metabolism to mood through the hormones it produces. Yet, thyroid hormone imbalances often go unnoticed—despite affecting millions. According to the American Thyroid Association, more than 12% of the U.S. population will develop a thyroid condition during their lifetime, and up to 60% of those affected may not even know it. These disorders are frequently misdiagnosed or overlooked, often dismissed as symptoms of stress, ageing, or other common conditions....

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How Stress Affects Your Heart: Cortisol, Hormones & Cardiovascular Risk

Posted by Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team on

Chronic stress is one of the most significant and underappreciated risk factors for heart disease and type 2 diabetes. When stress becomes persistent, cortisol — the body’s primary stress hormone — is produced in excess, disrupting insulin signalling, sex hormone balance, thyroid function, and cardiovascular health. This article explains the biological mechanisms linking stress, cortisol, and heart disease risk, the role of depression as a compounding factor, and the practical steps — including hormone testing and lifestyle changes — that can help reduce your risk.

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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.

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The Cortisol Awakening Response (CAR) and Adrenal Function

Posted by Ben White on

Discover why topical testosterone replacement therapy is frequently over-prescribed and how outdated serum testing methods may fail to reflect true hormone bioavailability. Learn how saliva and dried blood spot testing provide a more accurate picture of tissue hormone delivery, why physiological testosterone dosing matters, and how excessive testosterone may suppress natural production, reduce receptor sensitivity, and impact long-term hormonal balance, energy, mood, libido, and overall men’s health.

 

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