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Advanced hormone test, offering an extensive profile of sex and adrenal hormones and melatonin, along with their metabolites. The DUTCH Plus® adds the Cortisol Awakening Response to bring another important piece of the HPA axis into focus.
The DUTCH Plus® takes hormone testing to a new level. In addition to sex hormones and their metabolites, the DUTCH Complete™ looks at the overall diurnal pattern of free cortisol, and the total and distribution of cortisol metabolites. The DUTCH Plus® adds the Cortisol Awakening Response (CAR) to bring another important piece of the HPA axis into focus.
What is the Cortisol Awakening Response and how do we test for it?
When we open our eyes upon waking, cortisol levels naturally begin to rise by an average of 50%. 30 minutes after waking, cortisol levels will still show this sharp increase. By 60 minutes after waking, cortisol levels have peaked and begin to decline. Measuring this rise and fall of cortisol levels at waking can be used as a “mini stress test”. Research shows that the size of this increase correlates with HPA-axis function, even if the sample measurements are all within range. A quick saturation of saliva swabs upon waking, and at 30 and 60 minutes after waking, provide what is required to assess a patient’s Cortisol Awakening Response
A low or blunted Cortisol Awakening Response
Can be a result of an underactive HPA axis, excessive psychological burnout, seasonal affective disorder (SAD), sleep apnea or poor sleep in general, PTSD, chronic fatigue and/or chronic pain. A decreased CAR has also been associated with systemic hypertension, functional GI diseases, postpartum depression, and autoimmune diseases.
An elevated Cortisol Awakening Response
Can be a result of an over-reactive HPA axis, ongoing job-related stress (anticipatory stress for the day), glycemic dysregulation, pain (i.e. waking with painful joints or a migraine), and general depression (not SAD). A recent study1 showed that neither the waking nor post-waking cortisol results correlated to Major Depressive Disorder, but the CAR calculation (the change between the first two samples) did. This measurement of the response to waking has independent clinical value showing dysfunction that may be hidden by current testing options.
The kit includes:
Easy-to-follow Directions and Requisition Form
(4) Urine Collection Strips and (6) Salivette™ Saliva Collection Tubes
Resealable Plastic Bag
Sealable Return Envelope
The results include:
Analysis of 35 different hormones: estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, DHEA-S, and cortisol along with their metabolites, plus the cortisol awakening response (CAR)
Graphical representation of results and embedded video tutorials to assist in the hormone assessment to share with your medical provider
DUTCH OATs: Melatonin (6OHMS), 8-Hydroxy-2-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), and six organic acid tests (OATs) including markers for vitamin B12 (methylmalonate), vitamin B6 (xanthurenate), kynurenate, glutathione (pyroglutamate), dopamine (homovanillate), norepinephrine/epinephrine (vanilmandelate).
Norepinephrine/Epinephrine (Vanilmandelate or VMA)
Vitamin B6 (Kynurenate or KYNA)
Vitamin B6 (Xanthurenate)
Vitamin B12 (Methylmalonate or MMA)
Glutathione (Pyroglutamate)
Neuroinflammation (Quinolinate)
Gut Health (Indican)
Biotin (b-Hydroxyisovalerate)
8-OHdG (8-Hydroxy-2-deoxyguanosine)
Melatonin (6-OH-Melatonin-Sulfate)
Symptoms
Hormone and Oranic Acid Imbalance Symptoms
Conditions and symptoms associated with hormonal and organic acid imbalances include:
Mental and/or developmental delays
Night sweats
Headaches
Sleep problems
Mood swings
Difficulty concentrating
Stress
Memory lapse
Fatigue and weakness
Depression and/or anxiety
Hot flashes
Dizziness
Nausea
Sugar cravings
Low libido
Weight gain
Poor stamina
Decreased muscle mass/strength
Neck/back pain
Decreased urinary flow (men)
Erectile dysfunction
Chronic Irritability
Increased facial hair/acne
Irregular menstrual cycles
Thinning hair, eyebrows, or eyelashes
About Test
About DUTCH Plus®
Key Details
Review your kit - When you receive the test kit in the mail, review its contents, and read through the information provided with the kit.
This is a urine and saliva collection kit that you will collect for at home.
What Days of the Month Do I Collect?
Cycling Premenopausal Women
Begin collection between days 19 and 22 of a 28-day cycle. For longer cycles, add the number of days you usually go beyond 28 days. In a similar manner, subtract if your cycles are shorter (example: collect days 17-20 for a 26 day cycle)
For irregular cycles or non-cycling (ablation or uterus removed), watch the irregular cycle collection video in the video library at dutchtest.com/videos for suggestions on collecting.
Men & Non-Cycling or Postmenopausal Women
Collect any day.
Restrictions
Watch Your Fluid Consumption
Please limit the amount of fluid intake the night before and the day of the test. Limit total fluid intake to 32 to 64 ounces on the day of testing. Urine samples are best if they are not too diluted.
Using Hormones?
Collection and dosing timing depends on the question you and your clinician are trying to answer. Our general recommendations for monitoring patients while on therapy are as follows:
Hormone creams, gels, or suppositories taken in the morning should be delayed until after sample #4, otherwise, take hormones as directed by your clinician. For patches, pellets, or injections, it is usually best to collect midway between doses.
If taking oral progesterone, continue taking the night before this test at bedtime or as usual.
DO NOT TAKE oral DHEA 48 hours before, or any oral or sublingual estrogen* or pregnenolone 72 hours before your first collection. Check with your provider for specific instructions if you are unsure.
Any other hormones taken at NIGHT (including oral progesterone) should be taken after the bedtime sample.
If you take glucocorticoids (Prednisone, Dexamethasone, etc.), check with your provider. These products may significantly impact results. Sublingual hormones may result in difficult interpretations, and it may be best to skip the day of collection.
Do not skip doses of birth control for this test unless instructed by your practitioner.
Food, Alcohol, Supplements and Exercise
Avoid caffeine, alcohol, and strenuous exercise the night before or day of testing because it may negatively affect testing results.
Avoid morning food and drink until after collection #3.
Some foods and supplements may impact HVA organic acid results. Avoid avocado, bananas, and fava beans for 48 hours before collecting for optimal results. If you do consume, please make a note on your requisition form. If you take any of the following supplements, please consult your provider: Tyrosine, L-Dopa, D, L-Phenylalanine (DLPA), Mucuna, and Quercetin.
Oral Hygiene
Do not brush your teeth until after collections #3 and #5.
Do not floss on the day of collection or until ALL samples are collected. Consult your provider if you have questions.
When to Collect
While adhering to your most common wake/sleep schedule, collect as close as possible to the below timeline.
Sample #1: Waking
Collect saliva immediately upon waking, complete within 5 minutes, and set a timer for 30 minutes for Sample #2.
Collect the first urine sample.
Sample #2: 30 Min After Waking
Collect saliva 30 minutes after waking, then set the timer for 30 minutes for Sample #3.
Sample #3: 60 Min After Waking
Collect saliva for Sample #3.
Sample #4: 2-3 Hrs After Waking
Collect urine only, two to three hours after waking.
Sample #5: Before Dinner
Rinse your mouth with water 10 minutes prior to collecting saliva.
Collect both urine and saliva.
Sample #6: Bedtime (no later than midnight)
Rinse your mouth with water 10 minutes prior to collecting saliva.
Collect both urine and saliva.
Sample #7: Extra Cortisol Collection (optional)
If you struggle with staying asleep during the night, this sample can be used overnight. Keep the collection tube close to your bed and collect at the time of your sleep disturbance (minimize light exposure). You may complete the label after rising for the day. Otherwise, you may collect this sample at noon or as instructed by your provider.
How to Collect
Urine
Saturate the filter paper (the paper with two black lines) by urinating directly on to, or urinating into a clean cup and dipping the filter paper for 5 seconds.
Leave the sample open to dry for at least 24 hours.
Once dry, close each collection device and place them all in the resealable plastic bag provided.
Saliva
Remove the blue cap and place the cotton swab from the collection tube in your mouth. Leave the swab in your mouth until fully saturated, but not longer than 5 minutes. Lightly chewing on the swab may help stimulate saliva flow.
Once done, place the swab back in the same tube, just as you found it. Do not remove the inner tube. You do not need to spit into the tube. Touch the swab as little as possible with your hands.
Freeze all saliva samples until ready to ship.
Why Use DUTCH?
The Easiest Patient Collection
Patients collect just four or five dried urine samples over a 24-hour period. Dried samples are stable for several weeks making them convenient to ship worldwide.
Analytical and Clinical Validation
Precision Analytical’s testing methods go through a rigorous validation process to verify accuracy, recovery, and linearity. We pride ourselves in relentlessly pursuing the most accurate and precise techniques available for testing. See the data on the next page to support the analytical and clinical validation of this powerful new testing model.
Effective HRT Monitoring
DUTCH testing was designed to be optimally effective for most forms of hormone replacement therapy. Unique methods are used for improved monitoring of oral progesterone and vaginal hormones.
How does DUTCH Compare to Other Hormone Tests?
DUTCH vs. Saliva Testing
While the free cortisol pattern in saliva has clinical value, there is a significant missing piece to surveying a patient’s HPA-Axis function with saliva testing – measuring cortisol metabolites. To properly characterize a patient’s cortisol status, free and metabolized cortisol should be measured to avoid misleading results when cortisol clearance is abnormally high or low. Likewise with sex hormones, measuring estrogen and androgen metabolites gives a fuller picture for more precise clinical diagnosis of hormonal imbalances and HRT monitoring.
DUTCH vs. Serum Testing
While the most universally accepted testing method (due to the availability of FDA-cleared analyzers that are reliable and inexpensive), serum testing is lacking in some areas. Adrenal hormones cannot be effectively tested in serum because free cortisol cannot be tested throughout the day. There is also a lack of extensive metabolite testing (especially for cortisol and estrogens).
DUTCH vs. 24-Hour Urine Testing
There are two primary drawbacks to 24-hour urine testing of hormones. First, the collection is cumbersome, and as many as 40% of those who collect, do so in error (Tanaka, 2002). Secondly, dysfunction in the diurnal pattern of cortisol cannot be ascertained from a 24-hour collection. Some providers add saliva for daily free cortisol. DUTCH eliminates the need for two tests.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
What if I miss a collection?
The three morning saliva samples must be completed together. Samples #4-6, and the optional extra sample #7 can be collected on the following day as instructed.
Can I collect samples away from home?
Yes. Saliva samples should be frozen within 12 hours. Urine samples can be collected, left out to dry for 24 hours, and kept in a ziploc bag (not the one enclosed).
How long can I keep samples before sending them in?
The samples should be sent back as soon as possible. If you have to wait to send them in, place dried urine samples in the freezer with saliva samples for no longer than five weeks.
Do I need to stop taking my hormones for this test?
This test is built to test patients “on” their hormones. Our suggestion is to follow the instructions listed at the top of this page or any specific instructions given by your provider. If you are on hormones, but your provider wants to see your baseline levels (no hormones), please call 503.687.2050 to discuss.
What if my sleep schedule is abnormal (night workers, etc.)?
If you and your clinician want to know how night shift is affecting your stress curve, collect the first three saliva samples (samples #1, #2, and #3) after waking from your longest stretch of sleep (ideally, after 5 or more hours of sleep). Collect sample #5 before your evening meal (3rd meal of the day). Collect sample #6 before bedtime.
Alternatively, if you and your clinician want to know how “daytime,” not night shift, is affecting your stress curve, then collect on a typical day off.
What if I am unable to urinate at the specific time?
Simply drink some fluids and urinate as soon as you are able.
Is DUTCH Testing appropriate for children?
The minimum age for testing is 12 years old. To test children under 12, we strongly recommend the DUTCH Cortisol Awakening Response (CAR) measured with saliva.
How It Works
1
Order your test
You'll get an email confirmation from us.
2
Within 48 hours of payment
The lab will confirm your order and provide tracking.
3
2 days after kits ship
We will send you test instructions.
4
When results are in
You'll be notified via email, with instructions to access via secured portal.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
*Regulatory Statement*
Vibrant testing does not demonstrate absolute positive and negative predictive values for any disease state or condition. Its clinical utility has not been fully established. Vibrant validates the accuracy and precision of the testing but not of its clinical or diagnostic value. So these tests are for wellness and informational purpose only. Vibrant is actively doing clinical research on these samples, de-identified from patients under an IRB and will make research publications towards the same as and when the clinical utility is well established. These tests have been laboratory developed and their performance characteristics determined by Vibrant America LLC, a CLIA-certified laboratory performing the test CLIA#:05D2078809. The test has not been cleared or approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Although FDA does not currently clear or approve laboratory-developed tests in the U.S., certification of the laboratory is required under CLIA to ensure the quality and validity of the tests. The general wellness test intended uses relate to sustaining or offering general improvement to functions associated with a general state of health while making reference to diseases or conditions. Content provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as medical advice. Content provided to help you make a healthy lifestyle, dietary, and treatment choices in consultation with your healthcare provider. It is intended to be used as a tool to encourage a general state of health and well-being. Please consult with your healthcare practitioner for diagnosis and treatment considerations. The Vibrant Wellness platform provides tools for you to track and analyze your general wellness profile.