The clinically established spectrum of concentrations for hormones naturally produced within the body that is associated with optimal physiological function, vitality, and disease resistance across a specific demographic. This range reflects a functional optimum rather than merely the absence of acute pathology. It provides the target parameters for personalized endocrinological management.
Origin
This concept arises from clinical endocrinology, where “endogenous” signifies internally produced substances, and “range” establishes the expected biochemical boundaries based on population studies. The shift toward defining an optimal range, rather than just a normal range, reflects a more proactive approach to wellness science.
Mechanism
The operational mechanism involves the body’s homeostatic feedback loops, such as the HPG or HPA axes, maintaining circulating levels within these preferred boundaries. Factors like receptor density, binding protein concentrations, and metabolic clearance rates all contribute to establishing the steady-state concentration within this range. When exogenous factors or underlying conditions shift these concentrations outside the optimal zone, compensatory mechanisms may fail, leading to clinical manifestations.
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