Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — hormone and healthy emotional balance
Does Hormone Imbalance Contribute to Weight Gain?
Publié par Ben White le
If you’re doing everything right — eating well, exercising, taking your vitamins — but still can’t shift the weight, a hormone imbalance may be working against you. Hormone Health Educator Candace Burch of ZRT Laboratory breaks down the 8 most common hormonal culprits behind unexplained weight gain, from estrogen dominance and high cortisol to low vitamin D, disrupted sleep and a lack of strength training.
The Hidden Truth About Hormones And Weight Gain: Your Top 10 Questions
Publié par Ben White le
Weight management is a topic that generates a lot of questions — and hormone imbalance is one of the most common but overlooked causes. Hormone Health Educator Candace Burch of ZRT Laboratory answers the 10 most frequently asked questions about hormones and weight gain, covering everything from postmenopausal belly fat and estrogen dominance to vitamin D deficiency, thyroid imbalance and why standard blood tests often miss the picture.
Getting to the Heart of Estrogen
Publié par Ben White le
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in women, and the risk dramatically increases with menopause as estrogen levels decline. In this in-depth clinical article, Dr. Sherry LaBeck of ZRT Laboratory explains how estrogen protects the cardiovascular system through nitric oxide production, endothelial function, blood lipid regulation and anti-inflammatory mechanisms — and why the timing of estrogen replacement therapy is critical to its cardioprotective effect.
Of Seahorses & Menopause
Publié par Ben White le
Many women going through menopause notice changes in their ability to remember things — and this is not just in their heads. A small, seahorse-shaped structure in the brain called the hippocampus is highly dependent on estrogen for synaptic plasticity, memory formation and neuroprotection. In this article, Margaret Groves of ZRT Laboratory explains the science behind menopause-related memory changes, why estrogen receptor expression declines with age, and why the “window of opportunity” for hormone replacement is critical to preserving cognitive function.
Menopause – Is It All In Your Head?
Publié par Ben White le
Hot flashes, mood instability, brain fog and memory changes during perimenopause are not “all in your head” — but they are very much in your brain. In this in-depth clinical article, Dr. Kate Placzek of ZRT Laboratory explains how declining estradiol disrupts brain glucose metabolism, neurotransmitter signalling and thermoregulation, why perimenopause represents a window of neurological vulnerability, and why the timing of hormone replacement therapy is critical to protecting long-term brain health.