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Sex Hormones

Luteinizing Hormone (LH) Biomarker Test

Measure your Luteinizing Hormone (LH) with Superpower.

Gain clarity on fertility, cycle regularity, and testosterone production by tracking your LH levels.

This core hormone shows how the brain signals the ovaries or testes, helping you connect symptoms, goals, and next steps with confidence.

With Superpower, you have access to a comprehensive range of biomarker tests.

Book a Luteinizing Hormone (LH) test
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Sample type:
Blood
HSA/FSA:
Accepted
Collection method:
In-person at the lab, or at-home

Key Benefits

  • See how well LH signals your ovaries or testes to function.
  • Spot ovulation problems when cycles are irregular, absent, or hard to predict.
  • Clarify possible PCOS when LH is high relative to FSH and symptoms.
  • Differentiate testicular versus pituitary causes of low testosterone and fertility issues.
  • Flag premature ovarian insufficiency when LH is high with low estradiol.
  • Explain early or delayed puberty by gauging pituitary-driven reproductive signaling.
  • Guide fertility care by timing ovulation induction, trigger shots, or assisted reproduction.
  • Best interpreted with FSH, estradiol, testosterone, prolactin, and your symptoms.

What is Luteinizing Hormone (LH)?

Luteinizing hormone (LH) is a protein messenger made in the front part of the pituitary gland (anterior pituitary) under signals from the brain’s control center (hypothalamus via gonadotropin‑releasing hormone, GnRH). Once released into the bloodstream, LH travels to the reproductive organs (gonads) and binds to specific cells there. It is one of the two key pituitary “gonadotropins” that coordinate human reproduction, alongside follicle‑stimulating hormone (FSH).

LH acts as the body’s reproductive timing signal. In women, a sharp rise in LH triggers the release of an egg (ovulation) and converts the emptied follicle into a hormone‑producing gland (corpus luteum) that supports progesterone and estrogen production. In men, LH stimulates cells in the testes (Leydig cells) to produce testosterone, which enables sperm development and male reproductive function. Because it links brain signals to ovarian and testicular hormone output, LH reflects the activity of the hypothalamic‑pituitary‑gonadal axis (HPG axis) and helps orchestrate puberty, menstrual cycles, and fertility.

Why is Luteinizing Hormone (LH) important?

Luteinizing hormone (LH) is the brain’s go signal to the gonads. Released by the pituitary, it triggers ovulation in ovaries and drives testosterone production in testes. Through these sex steroids, LH influences fertility, menstrual rhythm, libido, muscle and bone maintenance, red blood cell production, mood, and metabolism.

Patterns vary by sex and life stage. In cycling women, LH is low early, surges mid‑cycle to trigger ovulation, then moderates. In men, it remains fairly steady. It is very low before puberty, suppressed in pregnancy, and chronically high after menopause. Outside the ovulatory surge, mid‑range values generally indicate a well‑tuned axis.

When LH is low, the brain‑pituitary drive is muted (hypogonadotropic hypogonadism). Ovaries may not ovulate and estrogen falls: irregular or absent periods, vaginal dryness, hot flashes, low bone density, and infertility. In men, testicular testosterone drops: low libido, erectile difficulty, fatigue, loss of muscle, anemia, and reduced sperm. In teens, puberty is delayed. Low LH is expected in pregnancy.

When LH is persistently high, the pituitary is compensating for under‑responsive gonads (primary ovarian or testicular insufficiency): sex hormones fall and fertility declines; the postmenopausal pattern reflects this. A brief spike is normal at ovulation. Chronically higher LH relative to FSH can accompany polycystic ovary syndrome with irregular cycles and excess androgens. In children, high LH can signal early puberty.

Big picture: LH is a real‑time readout of the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis. Because it governs estrogen and testosterone, it links to bone strength, body composition, metabolic and cardiovascular health, cognition, and lifelong reproductive capacity; pairing LH with FSH, estradiol or testosterone, prolactin, and thyroid tests clarifies where the axis is disrupted.

What Insights Will I Get?

Luteinizing hormone (LH) is a pituitary signal that coordinates the brain–gonad axis. In ovaries it triggers ovulation and luteal progesterone; in testes it drives testosterone from Leydig cells. Through these sex steroids, LH influences fertility, bone and muscle, metabolism, cognition, and mood.

Low values usually reflect reduced hypothalamic–pituitary drive (secondary hypogonadism). Common suppressors include stress or illness, low energy availability, high prolactin (hyperprolactinemia), obesity, and certain drugs; pregnancy and hormonal contraception also lower LH. In women this impairs ovulation and cycles. In men it reduces testosterone, affecting energy, libido, and body composition. In youth it can delay puberty.

Being in range suggests an intact brain–gonad feedback loop with adequate sex-steroid output. In reproductive‑age women, LH is low‑to‑moderate except for a brief mid‑cycle surge; in men, values are steady. Optimal typically sits mid‑range, supporting stable mood, bone turnover, red cell production, and metabolic balance.

High values usually reflect reduced gonadal responsiveness (primary hypogonadism) or a normal life‑stage transition. In women, LH rises in perimenopause/menopause and premature ovarian insufficiency; it may be disproportionately high in polycystic ovary syndrome. In men, high LH with low testosterone signals testicular failure; high LH with normal testosterone suggests compensated dysfunction.

Notes: LH is pulsatile and cycle‑dependent; single measurements vary by time of day and menstrual phase. Interpretation depends on age/puberty, pregnancy, acute illness, and drugs (sex steroids, GnRH analogs, opioids). Assays differ; pairing LH with FSH, estradiol or testosterone, and prolactin refines localization.

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membership

$17

/month
Billed annually at $199
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Your membership includes one comprehensive blood draw each year, covering 100+ biomarkers in a single collection
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Frequently Asked Questions

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How it works
What should I expect during a blood draw?
  • A trained phlebotomist will guide you through the process.
  • A tourniquet is placed on your arm, the site is cleaned, and a small needle is used to collect blood into one or more tubes.
  • Results are usually ready in about a week.
  • Most people feel only a quick pinch.
  • The needle is removed, gentle pressure is applied, and a bandage is placed.
How do I prepare for a blood draw?
  • Drink plenty of water beforehand — hydration makes veins easier to find.
  • Wear loose sleeves so your arm is easy to access.
  • Follow any fasting instructions you’ve been given.
  • Let us know if you’re on medications, have fainted before, or have needle anxiety.
What should I do after my blood draw?
  • Press gently on the site for a few minutes.
  • Keep the bandage on for 4-6 hours.
  • Skip heavy lifting or strenuous exercise for the rest of the day.
  • Drink extra water to rehydrate.
  • Monitor the site for redness, swelling, or pain.
How do I book a blood draw with Superpower?

Your membership includes:

  • An annual full body test and report across 100+ biomarkers
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Many concierge clinics charge $10k – $100k for their services, we’ve built technology to make the world’s best healthcare as accessible as possible via an all-in-one membership.

Where can I take my blood test?

Superpower is currently available in the following US states:

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Our testing
Does Superpower replace my primary care provider?

Superpower specializes in prevention-based testing and treatments and is not intended for emergency or immediate health issues.

While you will have a Superpower care team, your annual membership is designed to complement a primary care doctor if you have one, not replace them.

We are happy to help you share any test results with an outside provider to ensure you receive well-rounded medical care.

How fast are blood test results and how do I read them?

Your annual lab test panel takes about 10 days to process. We will text you as soon as they become available in your dashboard. Other types of tests may have different testing windows. The Superpower concierge is your own health assistant who helps answer your questions on your results, ensure smooth scheduling, coordination of any office-based tests, specialist referrals as needed, and navigating you to interface with your care team.

Does Superpower accept health insurance?

Superpower membership and products are all eligible for HSA/FSA funding.

We see Superpower like a gym membership for those committed to prevention and performance. Superpower is a bridge between wellness and healthcare. Health insurance traditionally focuses on reactive care whereas, at Superpower, we believe it’s never too early to start looking out for your long-term health.

What if I want more than 1 blood test per year?

Absolutely — you're not limited to just one. Your membership includes one comprehensive 100+ biomarker blood test each year, but if you'd like to track your progress more closely, you can add extra tests at any time. Each additional full-panel test costs $179. You can order as many as you'd like throughout the year.

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Frequently Asked Questions about Luteinizing Hormone (LH)

What is Luteinizing Hormone (LH) testing?

LH testing is a blood test that measures LH to assess pituitary–gonadal signaling, ovulation timing, and support for testosterone production.

Why should I test my Luteinizing Hormone (LH) levels?

Testing LH helps map ovulation, characterize cycle patterns, clarify causes of low testosterone, and track how training stress, energy availability, and age affect reproductive hormones.

How often should I test Luteinizing Hormone (LH)?

Frequency depends on your goals: for ovulation tracking, test near mid-cycle and around the expected surge; for baseline assessment, test in a consistent cycle phase or at regular intervals to monitor trends.

What can affect my Luteinizing Hormone (LH) levels?

Menstrual cycle phase, age, stress, heavy training, low energy availability, chronic illness, and medications such as hormonal contraception, testosterone therapy, GnRH analogs, and SERMs can shift LH.

Are there any preparations needed before Luteinizing Hormone (LH) testing?

Fasting is typically not required. For menstruating individuals, timing matters—testing mid-cycle helps detect the LH surge; testing in a consistent phase aids comparison over time.

How accurate is Luteinizing Hormone (LH) testing?

LH is measured using validated laboratory methods that provide reliable results when collected and processed under standardized conditions.

What if my Luteinizing Hormone (LH) is outside the optimal range?

Interpret results in context with age, sex, menstrual phase, and related markers like FSH, estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, prolactin, SHBG, and TSH to understand the likely source of imbalance.

Can lifestyle changes affect my Luteinizing Hormone (LH) levels?

Yes. Adequate energy intake, appropriate training load, sufficient sleep, and stress management can support normal LH signaling.

How do I interpret my Luteinizing Hormone (LH) results?

Consider whether LH aligns with expected patterns: a mid-cycle surge in ovulatory cycles, suppression with hormonal contraception or exogenous androgens, or elevation after menopause. Compare alongside other hormones for a fuller picture.

Is Luteinizing Hormone (LH) testing right for me?

LH testing is useful for anyone tracking ovulation, investigating cycle irregularity, exploring testosterone status, monitoring menopause transition, or assessing the impact of training and energy balance on reproductive health.

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