Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — fibrocystic breast disease
Iodine Beyond the Thyroid: Breast Health, Fertility & Brain Development
Publié par Hormone Lab Editorial Team le
Most people associate iodine exclusively with thyroid health — but this essential mineral plays a far broader role in the body. From breast tissue and ovarian function to fetal brain development and endometrial health, iodine is active in virtually every organ system. Deficiency is more widespread than commonly recognised, and standard thyroid blood tests cannot reliably detect it. This guide explores the extrathyroidal roles of iodine, the difference between iodide and molecular iodine, the controversy around dosing, and why testing urinary iodine is the most accurate way to assess your status.
How to Get Enough Iodine through Your Diet
Publié par Ben White le
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.
What Exactly Are We Talking About Breast Cancer
Publié par Ben White le
Breast cancer is not one disease — it encompasses many distinct types with different attributes, degrees of invasiveness and treatment responses. Understanding the difference between invasive and non-invasive cancers, what hormone receptor status means, and which risk factors are modifiable can help women make more informed decisions about screening, lifestyle and hormone health. This article provides a clear, evidence-based overview.
Breast Cancer: Prevention is the Cure
Publié par Ben White le
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.