Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — progesterone and breast health
A Perimenopausal Game Plan: Exercise, Diet & Hormones for Long-Term Health
Posted by Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team on
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.
What Our (ZRT Lab)Doctors Are Reading?
Posted by Ben White on
Explore the powerful connection between cortisol, melatonin, inflammation and circadian rhythms. Learn how disrupted hormone patterns may contribute to fatigue, insomnia, stress, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression and even cancer risk. This article reviews the latest insights from ZRT Laboratory doctors on hormone testing, sleep biology, stress physiology and the importance of maintaining healthy daily hormone rhythms for long-term wellness.
Genetic Sequence Variations and Breast Cancer Risk
Posted by Ben White on
Single nucleotide variations (SNVs) in the enzymes that metabolise estrogen can significantly alter breast cancer risk — in some cases by as much as 12-fold when multiple variants combine. In this detailed scientific overview, Jillian Harrington PhD of ZRT Laboratory explains how variations in CYP11A1, CYP19A1 (aromatase), CYP1B1, COMT and MnSOD affect the estrogen metabolism pathway, why catechol estrogens are dangerous, and how methylation testing can reveal individual vulnerability.
Breast Cancer: Prevention is the Cure
Posted by Ben White on
Breast cancer rates have risen from 1 in 30 to 1 in 8 women over the past 30 years — yet the focus remains on treatment rather than prevention. Drawing on 35 years of clinical experience and infrared thermography, this article makes the case that environmental toxins, xenoestrogens, hormone imbalance and lifestyle factors may account for 91–93% of breast cancer risk. Prevention, not just awareness, is the real cure.
How Hormone Balance Can Help Save Your Life: Preventing Breast Cancer
Posted by Ben White on
One in eight women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime. But many risk factors are modifiable — including hormone imbalance and excess weight. Discover the two most important actions women can take to reduce breast cancer risk, and how hormone testing can help identify hidden imbalances before they become a problem.