Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — cortisol and cardiovascular health
A Perimenopausal Game Plan: Exercise, Diet & Hormones for Long-Term Health
Publicado por Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team en
Perimenopause is far more than a collection of symptoms to manage — it is a critical window of opportunity to protect long-term cardiovascular, skeletal, and cognitive health. The hormonal fluctuations of this transition are directly linked to cardiovascular risk, making proactive action during perimenopause one of the most important investments a woman can make in her future health. This article outlines a practical three-step perimenopausal game plan covering hormone replacement, resistance training, and time-restricted eating — grounded in current research and designed to build the physiological reserves needed for a healthy postmenopause.
How Stress Affects Your Heart: Cortisol, Hormones & Cardiovascular Risk
Publicado por Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team en
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.
What is Cortisol?
Publicado por Ben White en
Cortisol is your body’s primary stress hormone, produced by the adrenal glands in response to physical, mental and emotional stress. While it plays a vital role in energy metabolism, immune function and cardiovascular health, both chronically high and chronically low cortisol levels can cause significant health problems — from fatigue, weight gain and sleep disorders to burnout and adrenal exhaustion. This article explains what cortisol is, what happens when it goes wrong, and why regular testing matters.
Diurnal Fluctuations in Norepinephrine and Epinephrine Levels as Part of the Healthy Stress Response
Publicado por Ben White en
Norepinephrine and epinephrine follow a distinct diurnal rhythm — rising through the morning, peaking in the afternoon, and falling at night. When this pattern is disrupted by chronic stress, the consequences ripple through every hormonal system in the body. Learn how the stress response works and how dried urine testing can reveal imbalances.