Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — endocrine wellness profile
Having Persistent Skin Problems? It might be your Hormones
Posted by Ben White on
Persistent skin problems — from acne and dryness to unwanted hair growth and premature wrinkling — are often rooted in hormone imbalance. Oestrogen, testosterone, DHT, progesterone, thyroid hormones, cortisol and vitamin D all play distinct roles in skin health. This article explains the connections and how hormone testing can help identify the underlying cause.
Skin Wellness and Your Hormone
Posted by Ben White on
The decline in oestrogen, progesterone and testosterone as we age is one of the primary drivers of skin thinning, wrinkling, dryness and loss of elasticity. But hormones affect skin in more ways than most people realise — from DHT-driven acne and unwanted hair growth to the risks of over-supplementation. This article explains the key hormonal connections to skin wellness and how targeted testing can guide safe, effective hormone use.
How to Get Enough Iodine through Your Diet
Posted by Ben White on
Iodine is an essential component of thyroid hormones T3 and T4, and plays a broader role in antioxidant defence and breast health. Yet many people are unknowingly deficient. This guide covers the recommended daily allowances for different life stages, the best dietary sources of iodine — from kelp to cod — and when testing your iodine and thyroid levels may be warranted.
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.
Thyroid Cancer Detection
Posted by Ben White on
Thyroid cancer is now among the top 10 most common cancers worldwide, with incidence rising by an average of 5.5% per year. But experts are divided: is this a genuine epidemic, or an epidemic of diagnosis driven by more sensitive imaging? This article reviews the evidence on both sides, explores the role of iodine deficiency, radiation exposure and environmental factors, and explains why thyroid awareness — and monitoring — matters year-round.