Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — hormone wellness testing
The Progesterone / Estradiol (Pg/E2) Ratio
Publicado por Ben White en
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.
The Role of Melatonin in Sleep
Publicado por Ben White en
Melatonin is far more than a sleep supplement — it is a master regulator of the body’s circadian rhythm, a potent antioxidant, and a key signal for cell repair and gene transcription. Understanding how melatonin is produced, what its daily curve looks like, and how it can be accurately measured through first-morning urinary MT6s testing is essential for anyone investigating sleep disturbances, fatigue or hormonal imbalance.
Navigating the Challenges of Hormone Replacement Therapy Dosing
Publicado por Ben White en
Over 25 million women enter menopause each year and face decisions about hormone replacement therapy. But HRT dosing is far from standardised — and the testing method used makes all the difference. This article explores why doses vary so widely and how saliva, blood spot and urine testing can help optimise outcomes.
Do You Know What Estrogen Dominance is?
Publicado por Ben White en
Estrogen dominance — an excess of oestrogen relative to progesterone — is one of the most common hormonal imbalances in women. From heavy periods and mood swings to breast tenderness and weight gain, the symptoms are wide-ranging. Discover the causes, what to test, and how to restore balance.
Banishing the 7 Dwarves of Menopause
Publicado por Ben White en
Itchy, Bitchy, Sweaty, Sleepy, Bloated, Forgetful and All Dried Up — the seven dwarves of menopause are all too real for millions of women. But these symptoms aren’t inevitable. Undetected hormone imbalances are behind most of them, and testing is the first step to getting your good menopause back.