Why They Look So Similar
Cortisol is produced by the adrenal glands in response to stress signals from the brain. Sex hormones (testosterone, estrogen, progesterone) are produced by the gonads in response to pituitary signaling. These are separate systems — but they share biological infrastructure that makes their dysfunction difficult to distinguish by symptoms alone.
Specifically: cortisol and sex hormones share the same precursor molecule (pregnenolone). When cortisol demand is chronically high, the body preferentially shunts precursors toward cortisol production — reducing the substrate available for sex hormone synthesis. The result is that chronic stress produces low-testosterone-like symptoms in men and low-progesterone-like symptoms in women, not because the primary sex hormone system is failing, but because cortisol is consuming the raw material.
How to Tell the Difference
Points Toward Cortisol as the Primary Driver
- Symptoms closely track stress levels — better during low-stress periods, worse during high-stress ones
- Difficulty relaxing, persistent mental activation, inability to "downshift" even when tired
- Energy crashes in the afternoon, second wind late at night (inverted cortisol rhythm)
- Waking at 3–4am with racing thoughts or anxiety
- Symptoms appeared or worsened following a sustained period of high stress
- Sleep improvement directly improves all other symptoms
Points Toward Primary Hormonal Imbalance
- In women: cycle-correlated symptoms that follow predictable patterns regardless of stress level
- In men: symptoms progressed gradually over years without a clear stress trigger
- Symptoms persist even during genuinely low-stress periods (vacation, sabbatical, extended calm)
- Body composition changes (muscle loss, central fat gain) that don't respond to training and diet adjustments
- Lab markers of poor sex hormone production despite managed stress
Symptoms cannot definitively distinguish cortisol dysfunction from primary hormone imbalance — both require data. Testing cortisol (including diurnal cortisol rhythm, not just a single reading) alongside testosterone or estrogen/progesterone gives the full picture. The Everlywell Men's Health Test and Women's Health Test both measure cortisol and sex hormones together — which is exactly the combination that resolves this question.
Why the Distinction Matters
If cortisol is the primary driver and you address it with testosterone support or estrogen replacement, you address a downstream symptom while the upstream driver continues. Cortisol regulation requires stress management, sleep optimization, nervous system support, and in some cases adrenal support — not sex hormone supplementation.
Conversely, if primary hormonal imbalance is driving your symptoms and you focus exclusively on stress reduction, you may see some improvement but will plateau because the underlying hormone system needs direct support.
The mechanism determines the intervention. Testing makes the mechanism clear.
Test First. Know Which Mechanism.
Both Test Boost Lab (men) and Her Vitality Lab (women) offer hormone testing that measures cortisol alongside sex hormones — giving you the full picture.