Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — endocrine health

Heat Waves & Hot Flashes

Posted by Ben White on

Hot flashes and night sweats affect up to 80% of women during perimenopause — but they are not inevitable, and they are not forever. The root cause is hormonal imbalance, particularly the out-of-sync fluctuation of oestrogen and progesterone as the ovaries begin to wind down. Discover the lifestyle changes, natural supplements and hormone testing strategies that can bring real relief.

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Menopause and Perimenopause

Posted by Ben White on

Perimenopause is far more than a reproductive transition — it is fundamentally neurological. As oestradiol declines, the brain’s bioenergetic system becomes compromised, neurotransmitter balance shifts, and the thermoneutral zone narrows, giving rise to hot flashes, mood instability, memory changes and sleep disruption. This article explores the neuroscience behind the menopausal transition and why hormone replacement therapy — timed correctly — may be the most effective intervention.

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Andropause

Posted by Ben White on

From the age of 45, most men experience a gradual decline in testosterone and DHEA — yet many put their symptoms down to “just getting old.” Andropause is real, measurable and manageable. Discover the symptoms, the truth about testosterone replacement therapy, and the lifestyle and testing strategies that help men age well rather than rapidly.

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Revelations of a Menopausal Mom

Posted by Ben White on

A heartfelt personal story of navigating menopause while raising young children, this article explores how hormone imbalance, hot flashes, night sweats, mood swings, fatigue, stress, and poor lifestyle habits can dramatically affect emotional wellbeing and family life during midlife. Learn how balanced nutrition, sleep, stress management, adrenal support, and hormone testing may help women regain hormonal balance and feel like themselves again through perimenopause and menopause. 

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Hormonal Contraceptives-It might be the reason of Increasing Risk of Depression

Posted by Ben White on

Explore the complex relationship between hormonal contraception, mood changes, and depression risk — particularly in teenagers and women sensitive to hormonal fluctuations. Learn the difference between natural progesterone and synthetic progestins, how estrogen and progesterone influence neurotransmitters like serotonin and GABA, and why some women may experience depressive symptoms, anxiety, or emotional changes while using hormonal contraceptives. Discover how hormone and neurotransmitter testing may help provide deeper insight into mood-related symptoms linked to birth control use. 

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