Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — hormone replacement monitoring

The Science of Saliva Testing: A Modern Approach to Hormone and Health Assessment

Posted by Behcet Bicakci on

Learn the science of saliva testing, how it measures bioavailable hormones, and why it’s trusted by patients, clinicians, and wellness experts.

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How Hormones Lead to Obesity

Posted by Ben White on

Imbalances in estrogen, testosterone, progesterone and cortisol — brought on by ageing, diet and modern-day stress — are key drivers of the obesity epidemic. Learn how your hormones influence fat distribution and weight regulation, and how at-home hormone testing can help you take control.

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Testosterone: Elixir or Dangerous Drug?

Posted by Ben White on

An FDA-approved testosterone gel was shown to significantly increase cardiovascular risk in older men — but does this mean testosterone therapy is dangerous? ZRT Laboratory’s research suggests the real problem lies in how testosterone is measured. Venous serum testing dramatically underestimates tissue exposure to topical testosterone, leading to pharmacological overdosing that goes undetected. This article explains why the testing method matters as much as the dose.

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Skin Wellness and Your Hormone

Posted by Ben White on

The decline in oestrogen, progesterone and testosterone as we age is one of the primary drivers of skin thinning, wrinkling, dryness and loss of elasticity. But hormones affect skin in more ways than most people realise — from DHT-driven acne and unwanted hair growth to the risks of over-supplementation. This article explains the key hormonal connections to skin wellness and how targeted testing can guide safe, effective hormone use.

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The Progesterone / Estradiol (Pg/E2) Ratio

Posted by Ben White on

When sex hormone test results show both oestradiol (E2) and progesterone (Pg) within normal ranges, yet symptoms persist, the Pg/E2 ratio provides a critical additional layer of clinical insight. A low ratio points to oestrogen dominance; a high ratio to progesterone dominance — each requiring a different therapeutic response. This article explains how the ratio is calculated, when it is clinically relevant, and how a real-world case illustrates its practical value.

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