Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — Dried Urine Testing

Testing Methods and Safety

Posted by Ben White on

At-home hormone testing using saliva, dried blood spot and dried urine collection is not only more convenient than clinic-based blood draws — it is also safer, more accurate for certain hormones, and essential for capturing time-sensitive samples like waking cortisol or first-morning melatonin. This article explains how each collection method works, why dried samples carry minimal infection risk, and how ZRT Laboratory’s CLIA-certified processes ensure reliable results.

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Cortisol Hormone Testing in Saliva, Blood & Urine

Posted by Ben White on

Cortisol can be measured in saliva, blood and urine — but each method tells a different story. Saliva reflects bioavailable cortisol, blood measures total output, and dried urine captures the full circadian pattern. This article explains the clinical differences and helps you choose the right test.

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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. 

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Diurnal Fluctuations in Norepinephrine and Epinephrine Levels as Part of the Healthy Stress Response

Posted by Ben White on

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.

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