Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — Magnesium
Mineral Imbalances & ADHD (Part 1: Zinc Deficiency & Copper Excess)-Final Focused
Publié par Ben White le
What if there was a safe, effective, inexpensive, and simple way to help treat one of the most common neurodevelopmental disorders of childhood? Health care professionals often overlook nutrients; yet imbalances in many minerals are frequently seen in medical disorders including ADHD. Fortunately, replenishing nutrients with an integrative treatment plan has proven to be an effective treatment for the symptoms of ADHD. In this two-part series, we will evaluate mineral deficiencies in zinc and magnesium, excess copper, and their relationship with neuropsychiatric symptoms. Minerals Essential for Health Minerals are inorganic substances essential for cell metabolism, neurotransmitter synthesis, growth, and development....
Element Testing – Why Sample Type Matters!
Publié par Ben White le
Learn why the biological sample used for element testing — urine, whole blood, serum, hair, or nails — can dramatically change how toxic and essential mineral results are interpreted. Discover how different sample types reveal recent intake, long-term exposure, body burden, deficiency, or chronic toxicity for elements like mercury, lead, cadmium, arsenic, selenium, zinc, copper, iodine, and magnesium, and why choosing the correct testing method is critical for clinically meaningful results.
The Birth Control Pill Coin Flip – Heads or Tails?
Publié par Ben White le
Impact of Excersise on Your Brain
Publié par Ben White le
Testing Urinary Neurotransmitters? Avoid the Big 5 Food
Publié par Ben White le
Discover how certain foods rich in serotonin and dopamine — including bananas, walnuts, pineapples, avocados, and nut butters — can interfere with urinary neurotransmitter testing and lead to false-positive results. Learn why proper test preparation matters, how neurotransmitter urine analysis is interpreted, and how combined neurotransmitter and cortisol testing can provide deeper insight into mood, stress, brain chemistry, and hormonal balance.