Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — cortisol and blood sugar
How Stress Affects Your Heart: Cortisol, Hormones & Cardiovascular Risk
Publié par Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team le
Chronic stress is one of the most significant and underappreciated risk factors for heart disease and type 2 diabetes. When stress becomes persistent, cortisol — the body’s primary stress hormone — is produced in excess, disrupting insulin signalling, sex hormone balance, thyroid function, and cardiovascular health. This article explains the biological mechanisms linking stress, cortisol, and heart disease risk, the role of depression as a compounding factor, and the practical steps — including hormone testing and lifestyle changes — that can help reduce your risk.
What Our (ZRT Lab)Doctors Are Reading?
Publié par Ben White le
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.
Questions & Answers for Weight Loss Winners & Dieting Downfalls
Publié par Ben White le
Weight loss failure is rarely just about willpower or diet — hormones are almost always involved. In this Q&A, Dr. Alyssa Burns-Hill of ZRT Laboratory tackles the most common questions from people struggling to lose weight despite their best efforts: from thyroid interference by the contraceptive pill and stress-driven cortisol cravings, to estrogen-reducing supplements, natural progesterone for menopause, and why 5-HTP can be a game-changer for mood, sleep and comfort eating.
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.
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.