Hormone changes in midlife can feel like a mystery. Some women breeze through perimenopause and menopause with mild symptoms, while others face years of fatigue, cravings, hot flashes, weight gain, or brain fog.
As a naturopathic doctor, I’ve found that one of the most powerful tools for supporting women during this transition is strategic lab testing. When we know which hormones are shifting, and how the body is adapting, we can design nutrition and lifestyle interventions that truly make a difference.
Below, I’ll share a functional framework for lab testing in both perimenopause and menopause.
Perimenopause: Testing During the Transition
Perimenopause is a time of fluctuation. Progesterone begins to decline, estrogen becomes unpredictable, and adrenal stress often rises. Because hormones are variable, timing matters.
Core Tests in Perimenopause
- Day 3 labs: LH, FSH, Estradiol (E2)
Gives insight into ovarian reserve and how the brain is signaling the ovaries. - Luteal phase progesterone (4–5 days post-ovulation):
Confirms ovulation and identifies luteal defects that drive insomnia, mood swings, and PMS flare. - DUTCH test (urine):
Reveals estrogen/progesterone balance and how hormones are metabolized—helpful in cases of estrogen dominance. - Cortisol/DHEA (saliva or urine):
Perimenopause is a stress test for the adrenals. Imbalances here contribute to sleep disturbance, cravings, and weight gain. - Thyroid panel:
Hypothyroidism often mimics perimenopausal symptoms—an important differential check.
Menopause: Establishing the Baseline
Once cycles stop for a full year, hormone fluctuations settle into consistently low levels. The focus of testing shifts from cycle tracking to baseline health and long-term disease prevention.
Core Tests in Menopause
- Serum Estradiol, Progesterone, LH, FSH:
Confirms menopausal status and documents low ovarian hormone output. - Testosterone & DHEA:
Assesses the body’s androgen reserve—critical for energy, muscle, libido, and metabolic resilience. - Cortisol profile:
Adrenals now provide the body’s only source of sex hormone precursors. Dysregulated cortisol worsens hot flashes and fatigue. - Metabolic panel (lipids, fasting glucose, insulin, HbA1c):
Menopause accelerates risk of diabetes and heart disease—these labs keep us proactive. - Thyroid panel:
Identifies thyroid dysfunction, which is increasingly common in midlife and can mimic menopausal symptoms. - Vitamin D and bone markers:
Estrogen decline increases bone turnover—testing helps guide nutrition and supplementation for bone strength.
The Functional Lens
Conventional lab ranges separate “normal” from “disease.” In functional medicine, we look at optimal ranges, levels that support energy, mood, cognition, and long-term health. This perspective often explains why women feel unwell even when their labs look “normal” by conventional standards.
Why It Matters
Lab testing doesn’t just confirm menopause, it gives us a roadmap. When interpreted through a functional lens, it connects directly to nutrition and lifestyle strategies:
- Estrogen metabolism: supported by cruciferous vegetables, fiber, B vitamins, and phytonutrients.
- Adrenal resilience: nourished by magnesium, vitamin C, stress management, and quality sleep.
- Metabolic stability: achieved through protein optimization, balanced carbs, and resistance training.
- Bone health: protected with vitamin D, calcium, protein, and strength training.
- Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy
Takeaway
Perimenopause and menopause are not illnesses, they are natural transitions. But they are transitions that deserve clarity, strategy, and support. Lab testing is the compass that points us toward effective, individualized care.
To consider any of these assessments book a consultation with us at Noble Naturopathic here.
Dr. David Duizer ND

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