Perimenopause is a natural transition marked by fluctuating estrogen levels that can trigger hot flashes, mood changes, sleep disturbances, weight gain, and cognitive shifts. Understanding how estrogen supports the heart, bones, brain, and emotional well-being is essential for managing symptoms effectively. This article explores estrogen’s vital role, the science behind perimenopausal changes, treatment options including HRT and non-hormonal approaches, and the cultural history shaping how women experience menopause today. Convenient at-home hormone testing can also provide valuable insight and empower women to take control of their health during this transformative stage.
Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — ZRT Laboratory UK
Saliva Hormone Testing: How It Works and Why It Matters
Posted by Hormone Lab Editorial Team on
Saliva hormone testing is one of the most accurate and convenient ways to measure bioavailable hormones — the fraction that is actually active in your body's tissues. Unlike standard blood tests, which measure total hormone levels including protein-bound fractions that cells cannot use, saliva testing captures only the free, unbound hormones that drive real physiological effects. This guide explains how saliva testing works, which hormones it measures, why it is clinically superior for monitoring hormone therapy, and how to choose the right test for your health goals.
Menstrual Cycle & Cycle Maps and Hormones
Posted by Ben White on
Explore how hormones fluctuate through every stage of the menstrual cycle — from menarche to menopause — and discover how estrogen, progesterone, LH, and FSH influence mood, energy, fertility, PMS, migraines, weight changes, and overall women’s health. Learn how menstrual cycle mapping can help identify hormone imbalances and provide deeper insight into symptoms throughout the month.
Going Through "The Change" - Mood and Menopause
Posted by Ben White on
In perimenopause, falling estradiol doesn’t just trigger hot flashes — it disrupts serotonin production, driving mood swings, brain fog and sleepless nights. Discover the hormonal science behind “the change” and how testing can help.
Element Testing – Why Sample Type Matters!
Posted by Ben White on
Learn why the biological sample used for element testing — urine, whole blood, serum, hair, or nails — can dramatically change how toxic and essential mineral results are interpreted. Discover how different sample types reveal recent intake, long-term exposure, body burden, deficiency, or chronic toxicity for elements like mercury, lead, cadmium, arsenic, selenium, zinc, copper, iodine, and magnesium, and why choosing the correct testing method is critical for clinically meaningful results.