How to know if your body is stressed even though you don't feel 'stressed'
How to know if your body is stressed even though you don't feel 'stressed'
Your body's secret stress response
Signs your body is stressed — even when you feel fine
Physical signs that may be associated with chronic stress
Behavioral patterns that can signal hidden stress
How hidden stress can affect PCOS, thyroid, fertility, and perimenopause
PCOS and insulin resistance
Thyroid function
Fertility
Perimenopause
What happens at a hidden stress assessment
1
Information gathering
The first visit focuses on understanding your full picture — your symptoms, health history, current concerns, and what you've already tried. This is a clinical conversation, not a checklist. The goal is to understand what's happening for you specifically.
2
Targeted testing
Based on your presentation, specific cortisol panels are selected. These may include a 4-point salivary cortisol test (which maps your cortisol rhythm throughout the day), the DUTCH test (a comprehensive hormone metabolite panel), blood cortisol and ACTH levels, or urinary cortisol measurement. Depending on your clinical picture, we may also assess iron, B vitamins, and other hormones that interact with the stress response. Testing is tailored to the individual — not every patient needs every test.
3
Treatment plan
Once results are in, a treatment plan is developed based on what the testing reveals. Treatment typically begins within the first one to two visits. Options may include targeted supplementation, botanical medicine such as adaptogens and nervines, acupuncture, and specific lifestyle modifications. Once a treatment plan is established, follow-up appointments are typically every several months.
Meet the author and our medical director, Dr Fiona Mcculloch, ND