Bioidentical Hormone Testing Saliva Cortisol Hormone Testing
About Hormone Testing Should you Test Bioidentical Hormones

Bioidentical Hormone Testing

Submitted September 2, 2006 11:24 am


Saliva hormone testing allows you to measure your levels of the hormones estradiol, progesterone, and testosterone. Comparing your female hormone levels to the normal range of hormones for your age will help you and your doctor evaluate how bioidentical hormone replacement therapy will or has changed your hormone levels.

Hormones can be tested through non-invasive tests from blood and urine. Currently, saliva testing is able to test levels of estradiol, estriol, estrone, progesterone, testosterone, DHT, DHEA, melatonin and cortisol.

It is highly recommended to get a saliva test, for a base line level to start with before starting any hormone therapy. Then the tests should be repeated in 2 to 3 months. This way you will be able to evaluate if Hormone Replacement Therapy has affected your levels. It is then recommended to repeat the test again once a year while on this therapy. It is suggested that you test for Estriol, Estradiol, Estrone, Progesterone, Testosterone, Cortisol, DHEA, Melatonin, DHT and Pyrilinks D (urine test) for bones.

It is also very important and well suggested, that you get your hormones tested in your 30’s-40’s, before you have even entered perimenopause or menopause, to establish your normal hormone levels, and how your body metabolizes them. If you do the testing early, you will then have something to compare yourself, when you felt good and normal, to later when you begin menopause and your hormone levels begin to fall. This can help your healthcare professional prescribe the right dosages for you to get back on track.

Finding a satisfactory dose for you can take several months and anything that you can do in advance to speed up the process will only help you in the long run. Your doctor may see dozens of patients that each need their own individual dose, so he will be experienced in helping you find where you should be. Just make sure that you tell him everything that changes, so you can aid him in his prescriptions.

 

About Hormone Testing

August 25, 2006

There are several tests done to detect if you are going through early menopause.  Your doctor can perform these tests if you suspect that you are experiencing symptoms of perimenopause.  Some of these include:

            FSH -follicle stimulating hormone

A blood test can be done to determine the levels of FSH in your blood.  Because your FSH levels rise when your ovaries stop producing enough estrogen, high FSH levels can signal that your body is entering menopause. This is the key test to determine your stage of menopause.

Normal Menstruating  

Follicular Phase           2.5 to 10.2

Midcycle Peak             3.4 to 33.4

Luteal Phase               1.5 to 9.1

Postmenopausal            23.0 to >116.3

Estrogen (Estradiol) Levels
Estradiol is the primary human estrogen.  When your ovaries begin to fail, your circulating estradiol levels drop.  Doctors often give a serum estradiol concentration test to measure the amount of estradiol in your blood.  If your estrogen levels are lower than normal, this is a signal of ovarian failure, or, in other words, early menopause. 

If your estradiol levels are lower than 50 picograms per milliliter, you may still be having a period, but also may be experiencing symptoms of low estrogen.

Non-menopausal:  

Follicular Phase          24-138

Luteal Phase             19-164

Periovulatory            107-402

Postmenopausal:  

No  HRT          <36

With HRT        18-361

Another test is a thyroid test.  Many doctors will also recommend that you have your thyroid tested when you suspect menopause. This is for two reasons: First, many women in premature menopause also are at a higher risk for thyroid problems. Second, many symptoms of thyroid disease overlap with menopausal symptoms. In fact, thyroid diseases often interfere with menstruation. Testing your thyroid will help determine whether you are in premature menopause, or if you have a thyroid disease.

Last, is a saliva test.  Some doctors recommend saliva testing to measure hormone levels. This isn't as widely used as blood testing, but some say that it is quicker, less expensive and reliable.  With salivary testing, your doctor takes samples of your saliva to see the levels of hormones you are producing and to determine if you have any deficiencies.  Unlike the blood tests, the saliva hormone tests will show the levels of "free" hormones in your body.  Free hormones are the hormones that aren't bound to proteins, but instead are able to move into cells.   Because about 95% or more of your blood hormones are bound, the saliva tests measure only the remaining 1 to 5%.  The results may be much lower than that which you see on your blood test results. 

 

Should You Test for Bioidentical Hormones Or Not?


September 1, 2006

Some people believe that with all the new information we have about bioidentical hormones and its advantages that the testing should be standard routine. But there are several factors why it’s not. First, it is not "standard of care" or deemed medically necessary. This means that when you have a problem that may be related to your cycle and the hormone fluctuations that go with it, your doctor is not required to order a test to measure your hormone levels before you are treated. Actually, they can prescribe birth control pills or synthetic HRT at any time, with only personal information or a feeling that these drugs may be right for you.

The reasons why hormone testing, and prescribing natural hormones, is not standard practice has more to do with patent law and the pharmaceutical industry than anything else. There is also the fact that most medical schools have until recently ignored natural hormones as an option in treating women's hormonal imbalances. Drug companies are out to make money. Natural, plant-based hormones cannot be patented and marketed as exclusive products, therefore giving no advantage to the pharmaceutical companies. Even though safe, plant-based sources for making bioidentical natural progesterone and estrogen are readily available, pharmaceutical companies rarely use them (although the harm and findings of new studies about synthetic hormones is beginning to propel them in that direction). Instead they use lab-formulated synthetic progestins and estrogens to make their HRT formulas. When sales representatives talk with doctors, they offer flashy brochures and literature about double-blind studies conducted and/or financed, of course, by the drug companies. For some drugs, such as Viagra, manufacturers appeal directly to consumers, who in turn request that their healthcare providers prescribe these drugs.

Nobody is advertising for the use of natural hormones to medical offices because, at least for now, there is no money to be made. In fact, mainstream healthcare providers who are familiar enough with natural hormones to prescribe seem to be in the minority. So it is no surprise that mainstream medical practitioners are reluctant to initiate hormone testing to determine dosing for medicines they know little or nothing about.

The same goes for natural supplements and herbal remedies. These alternatives have neither private funding nor representatives hounding medical offices to tout their benefits. If medical providers want to find out about these alternatives, they must do just as you are doing, and educate themselves. Given their hectic schedules, time constraints, and demanding practices, it isn't too surprising that most healthcare practitioners haven't done so.

Most likely, the use of bioidentical hormones will eventually come into use because patients are going to demand it, many are already. Women are justifiably scared of synthetic HRT, and more information is getting out that therapy using natural, bioidentical hormones is a safe and effective alternative for relieving unpleasant symptoms.

Medical practitioners who lack education about hormone testing and treatment with the natural alternatives nevertheless claim that hormone testing is inaccurate because levels change constantly as a woman cycles through the month. It’s true that hormone levels do fluctuate and every woman is unique, but those facts don't cancel the value and accuracy of carefully conducted hormone testing, especially through saliva testing. It is being done successfully and has been absolutely invaluable in my medical practice and those of informed colleagues across the nation.

 

Saliva Cortisol Test


September 5, 2006

Your healthcare professional may order a saliva cortisol test when symptoms of Cushing’s syndrome and Addison’s disease are present. Both Cushing’s syndrome and Addison’s disease are serious adrenal disorders. Both testing of the urine as well as saliva are common testing methods for excess cortisol production. Once your healthcare professional has determined an abnormal level of cortisol, further testing will be done in order to determine cause and severity of the deficiency or excessiveness.

Symptoms of Cushing’s syndrome that may lead to a saliva cortisol test include:
- Obesity
- Muscle wasting
- Muscle weakness

Symptoms of Addison’s disease that may indicate the need to perform a saliva cortisol test include:
- Weakness
- Fatigue
- Increased pigmentation
- Others

For people with a normal cycle of cortisol levels, the levels are higher in the morning, and lower at night. If you work a night job, this pattern will not be maintained, and people with Cushing’s will also not maintain a normal pattern. Increased or normal cortisol concentrations in the morning, with levels that do not drop in the afternoon and evening suggest that your body is overproducing cortisol. If this excess cortisol is suppressed during a dexamethasone suppression test, it suggests that the excess cortisol is due to increased pituitary ACTH production. If it is not suppressed, then the increased cortisol could be due to an ACTH-producing tumor outside of the pituitary, a problem with the adrenal gland, or a medication that the patient is taking.

If the adrenal glands are overactive, then a patient may have Cushing’s syndrome, with symptoms and signs caused by prolonged exposure to the effects of too much cortisol. This may be due to excess production of cortisol by the adrenal glands, which is frequently due to a benign adrenal tumor, or excess ACTH stimulation, due to a pituitary or other ACTH-producing tumor. It can also be seen in patients who must take corticosteroid medications, such as those used to treat asthma. If decreased cortisol production is due to adrenal damage, then the patient is predicted to have Addison’s disease.

 

For More Information Regarding Bioidentical Hormones, Please Visit HRT (www.BioidenticalMedicalDictionary.com)

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