Hormonal & Metabolic
Hormones are chemical messengers that directly modulate brain function. Small imbalances cause significant cognitive effects.
If you only do one thing from this chapter:
Get a full thyroid panel
Not just TSH — ask for Free T3, Free T4, and TPO antibodies. Subclinical thyroid disease is one of the most commonly missed causes of brain fog, and it's a simple blood draw.
Too foggy to read this section? Start here:
- • Full thyroid panel (not just TSH) — Free T3 in upper third of range is optimal
- • If 40+ with recent-onset fog: check estradiol, testosterone, DHEA-S
- • Blood sugar stability: eat 25g protein within 1 hour of waking
Perimenopause & Andropause
If you're 40+ and fog appeared recently without clear trigger, hormonal shifts are a leading suspect:
Women: Perimenopause
Erratic estrogen causes "estrogen withdrawal" fog episodes. Test FSH, estradiol, progesterone.
Learn more →Men: Andropause
Testosterone declines ~1%/year after 30. Test total/free testosterone, SHBG (morning draw).
Learn more →Key Hormones for Brain Fog
Thyroid (T3/T4)
The master metabolic regulator. Low thyroid = slow everything, including cognition. Learn more →
Estrogen / Progesterone
Estrogen has receptors throughout the brain. Perimenopause brain fog is real. Learn more →
Testosterone
Affects both men and women. Cognitive symptoms often appear before physical ones. Learn more →
Cortisol
Chronic stress flattens the cortisol curve. No morning peak = no mental energy. Learn more →
Insulin
Insulin resistance affects the brain before it becomes diabetes. The brain uses 20% of glucose but has no storage. Learn more →
Hormonal Strategies (9)
Comprehensive Hormone Panel
Beyond basic thyroid: test cortisol, DHEA-S, testosterone, estrogen, progesterone. Hormonal imbalances are treatable causes of fog.
PROTOCOL
Morning fasted blood draw. Test: cortisol (AM), DHEA-S, total/free testosterone, estradiol, progesterone (women: day 19-21).
Cortisol Rhythm Assessment
HPA axis dysfunction causes abnormal cortisol patterns. High evening cortisol disrupts sleep. Low morning cortisol causes fatigue.
PROTOCOL
4-point salivary cortisol (waking, noon, evening, bedtime). Or DUTCH test for comprehensive hormone metabolites.
Testosterone Optimization (Men)
Low testosterone impairs memory, concentration, and mood. "Normal" range is very wide. Symptoms matter more than numbers.
PROTOCOL
Test total and free testosterone (AM fasted). Optimize sleep, strength training, body composition first. TRT if indicated.
Estrogen/Progesterone Balance (Women)
Perimenopause begins 4-8 years before menopause. Fluctuating hormones cause "menopause brain fog." Treatable and temporary.
PROTOCOL
Track symptoms with cycle. Test day 3 (FSH, estradiol) and day 21 (progesterone). Consider HRT if symptomatic perimenopausal.
Adrenal Support Protocol
"Adrenal fatigue" is controversial but HPA axis dysfunction is real. Chronic stress depletes cortisol reserve and DHEA.
PROTOCOL
Adaptogens: ashwagandha 300-600mg, rhodiola 200-400mg. Phosphatidylserine 100mg if evening cortisol high. Address root stressors.
Blood Sugar Optimization
Insulin resistance causes brain fog before diabetes develops. The brain is exquisitely sensitive to glucose fluctuations.
PROTOCOL
Test fasting glucose, HbA1c, fasting insulin. Calculate HOMA-IR. Target: fasting glucose <95, HbA1c <5.5%, HOMA-IR <1.0.
Growth Hormone Optimization
GH declines with age (somatopause). Natural optimization through sleep, exercise, and fasting is safer than supplementation.
PROTOCOL
Optimize deep sleep. High-intensity exercise. Intermittent fasting. Avoid eating before bed. Arginine/ornithine controversial.
Pregnenolone (Caution)
The "mother hormone" that becomes all other steroid hormones. Declines with age and stress. Some evidence for cognitive enhancement.
PROTOCOL
10-50mg morning. Test levels first. Monitor for side effects. Can convert to downstream hormones unpredictably.
⚠️ Hormone supplementation requires medical supervision. Can affect other hormone levels.
PCOS Cognitive Protocol
Polycystic Ovary Syndrome causes insulin resistance, inflammation, and hormonal imbalance — all affecting cognition.
PROTOCOL
Inositol 2-4g daily (40:1 myo:d-chiro ratio). Low-glycemic diet. Metformin if indicated. Address inflammation and sleep.
20% of Glucose
The brain uses 20% of the body's glucose but has no storage. It's exquisitely sensitive to blood sugar swings — even "normal" HbA1c can mask problematic variability that causes fog.
DIAGNOSTICS
Tests & Biomarkers
Full reference for all recommended lab tests
ROOT CAUSES
All Causes
Thyroid, metabolic, and hormonal conditions
This information is for educational purposes only. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional.