Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — adrenal wellness testing

STRESS & ADRENAL HORMONES

Publié par Ben White le

Your adrenal glands are your body's frontline stress managers — producing cortisol, DHEA and adrenaline to keep you functioning under pressure. But when stress becomes chronic, these glands can fall out of balance, leading to fatigue, weight gain, insomnia, anxiety and more. Discover how adrenal hormones work, what imbalance looks like, and 10 evidence-based tips to restore balance.

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Stress, Hormones And Weight Gain - What You Need to Know about?

Publié par Ben White le

Obesity is not simply a matter of calories in versus calories out. Chronic stress triggers a cascade of hormonal changes — elevated cortisol, depleted DHEA, disrupted leptin signalling and imbalanced sex hormones — that actively drive visceral fat storage and metabolic dysfunction. This article explains the biochemistry of stress-related weight gain and why understanding your hormone levels is key to breaking the cycle.

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Experiencing Adrenal Fatigue?

Publié par Ben White le

An estimated 80% of adults will experience some level of adrenal fatigue in their lifetime — yet it remains one of the most under-diagnosed conditions in modern medicine. When the adrenal glands are chronically overtaxed, cortisol output drops, leaving the body unable to manage stress, stabilise blood sugar or mount immune defences. This article explores the symptoms, causes and what you can do to identify and address adrenal fatigue through targeted hormone testing.

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Do You Know What Estrogen Dominance is?

Publié par Ben White le

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.

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Cortisol Hormone Testing in Saliva, Blood & Urine

Publié par Ben White le

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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