The P:E ratio is one of the most clinically meaningful numbers in functional hormone analysis. Standard lab ranges tell you whether each hormone is in range in isolation. The ratio tells you whether they are balanced relative to each other, which is what actually drives symptoms.
The P:E ratio is one of the most clinically meaningful numbers in functional hormone analysis. Standard lab ranges tell you whether each hormone is in range in isolation. The ratio tells you whether they are balanced relative to each other, which is what actually drives symptoms.
Standard lab reference ranges are built on population averages. They tell you whether your value falls within the range seen in most people, not whether it is optimal for you. A woman can have an estradiol of 80 pg/mL and a progesterone of 0.8 ng/mL and both will read as normal. But the ratio is severely imbalanced, and she will feel it.
The P:E ratio gives a single number that reflects the relative balance between the two primary female sex hormones. This balance governs mood, sleep, cycle regularity, metabolic function, thyroid conversion, and long-term tissue health.
A ratio between 100 and 600 is generally considered optimal during the luteal phase. Below 100 indicates estrogen dominance. Above 600 suggests estrogen deficiency relative to progesterone, which becomes more common in perimenopause and post-menopause.
Timing is critical. Progesterone is only meaningfully elevated during the luteal phase, the 10 to 14 days after ovulation. Drawing labs on day 3 of your cycle will show low progesterone regardless of how healthy your hormones are, because that is where it should be at that point in the cycle.
The P:E ratio is one data point. A complete functional hormone review looks at 31 markers including SHBG, DHEA-S, cortisol, thyroid cascade, and metabolic markers, and reads them in sequence using the MARCH method. One number does not tell the whole story. See the full Lab Intelligence service →
The P:E ratio is one data point. A full lab intelligence review reads all 31 markers in sequence and builds a protocol around the root pattern.