Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — clinical hormone testing
Saliva Hormone Testing: A Smarter Way to Measure Your Hormones
Publicado por Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team en
Saliva hormone testing is a non-invasive, scientifically validated method for measuring the bioavailable fraction of key hormones — including cortisol, oestrogen, progesterone, testosterone, and DHEA — from the comfort of home. Unlike standard blood tests, which measure total hormone levels including the inactive, protein-bound fraction, saliva testing reflects the hormones that are actually active in tissues and driving biological effects. Combined with LCMS (liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry) technology, saliva testing offers exceptional accuracy, sensitivity, and clinical relevance for assessing hormone balance, monitoring hormone therapy, and understanding the root causes of symptoms such as fatigue, mood changes, poor sleep, and hormonal imbalance.
Understanding Androgen Metabolites: What They Are and Why They Matter
Publicado por Behcet Bicakci en
Androgen metabolite testing provides deeper insight into how the body produces, converts, and eliminates hormones such as testosterone and DHT. By analyzing urine metabolites rather than single hormone levels, clinicians gain a more complete picture of hormonal balance, helping guide personalized treatment, monitor therapy effectiveness, and detect imbalances linked to conditions like PCOS, acne, hair changes, and metabolic issues.
Saliva Hormone Testing: How It Works and Why It Matters
Publicado por Hormone Lab Editorial Team en
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.