Key Benefits
- Check your prolactin level to understand fertility, menstrual health, and pituitary function.
- Protect fertility by spotting hormone imbalance behind missed periods or infertility.
- Explain unexpected nipple discharge by identifying abnormally high prolactin levels.
- Flag possible pituitary tumor when prolactin is markedly elevated.
- Clarify thyroid-related causes because an underactive thyroid often raises prolactin and disrupts cycles.
- Guide medication review since antipsychotics, antidepressants, and opioids can elevate prolactin.
- Explain low libido or erectile issues by uncovering prolactin-related low testosterone.
- Track treatment response and trend levels to restore normal reproductive hormones.
What is a Prolactin blood test?
Prolactin blood testing measures the level of prolactin, a protein hormone (polypeptide) made mainly in the front part of the pituitary gland (anterior pituitary) by lactotroph cells. Its release is normally held back by signals from the brain’s dopamine system (hypothalamic dopamine). Prolactin naturally rises in pregnancy, after childbirth, with nipple stimulation, and during sleep.
Prolactin’s core job is to start and sustain milk production (lactation) and support breast development (mammary gland maturation). It also shapes the reproductive hormone network by dialing down the brain signal that triggers ovulation and sperm/testosterone production (suppression of GnRH, with downstream effects on LH and FSH). Because of this, prolactin influences menstrual cycles, fertility, and sexual function in all sexes. It also has roles in stress and immune signaling. A prolactin test therefore reflects how active the pituitary’s prolactin system is and how well the brain’s dopamine “brake” is working, offering a window into lactation biology and the broader reproductive hormone axis.
Why is a Prolactin blood test important?
Prolactin is a pituitary hormone that links the brain’s signals to reproduction, breast development, and milk production. It also modulates stress responses and immune activity. A prolactin blood test therefore gives a window into pituitary health and the reproductive axis, with ripple effects on menstrual cycles, fertility, sexual function, bone health, and mood.
In adults not pregnant or breastfeeding, typical values sit in the low double digits (men often about 5–15; nonpregnant women about 5–25). within reference ranges tends to be in the lower-to-middle part of that range. Levels naturally rise with sleep, stress, sex, and some medicines, and are much higher in pregnancy and lactation.
When prolactin is low, it usually reflects reduced pituitary lactotroph activity or strong dopamine inhibition. Most people feel little, but after childbirth it can cause poor milk production. Because low prolactin can travel with other pituitary hormone deficits, there may be fatigue, low libido, or low blood pressure from accompanying adrenal or thyroid insufficiency.
When prolactin is high, the dopamine “brake” is lifted—by a prolactin-secreting pituitary adenoma, hypothyroidism, kidney or liver disease, or medications that block dopamine. Elevated prolactin suppresses GnRH, lowering estrogen or testosterone: women may have irregular or absent periods, infertility, vaginal dryness, or milk discharge; men may have low libido, erectile dysfunction, reduced body hair growth, and occasionally galactorrhea. Large pituitary tumors can cause headaches or vision changes. In teens, sustained elevation can delay puberty.
Big picture, prolactin sits at the crossroads of the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal and thyroid systems. Persistently abnormal levels influence fertility, bone density, and wellbeing, making this test a key clue to endocrine balance and long-term health.
What insights will I get?
Prolactin is a pituitary hormone mainly known for enabling lactation, but it also modulates the reproductive axis, stress responses, immune signaling, and energy balance. The test reflects pituitary lactotroph output under hypothalamic control—dopamine restrains prolactin, while estrogen and TRH stimulate it—so results give a window into pituitary-hypothalamic integration and the downstream effects on sex hormones, bone, mood, and metabolism.
Low values usually reflect reduced pituitary secretion or increased dopaminergic tone (including dopamine-boosting drugs). In nonpregnant adults, low prolactin is often asymptomatic but can signal broader pituitary underactivity, especially if other pituitary hormones are low. In the postpartum setting, very low levels can contribute to poor milk production.
Being in range suggests stable hypothalamic-pituitary control with balanced dopaminergic inhibition and normal feedback across the reproductive axis. In nonpregnant adults tested in the morning, optimal tends to sit in the low-to-mid portion of the reference interval, consistent with normal sex hormone production and bone maintenance.
High values usually reflect physiologic states (pregnancy, breastfeeding) or pathologic drivers such as pituitary adenoma (prolactinoma), primary hypothyroidism, chronic kidney disease, liver disease, chest wall stimulation/injury, or medications that block dopamine (e.g., antipsychotics, metoclopramide) or raise estrogen. Elevated prolactin suppresses GnRH, lowering LH/FSH and sex steroids—leading to irregular or absent periods, infertility, low libido, erectile dysfunction, galactorrhea, and longer-term bone loss. Large adenomas may cause headaches or visual changes.
Notes: Prolactin rises with sleep, stress, recent exercise, and nipple stimulation; morning, fasting sampling reduces variability. Pregnancy and lactation require separate ranges. Assays can be confounded by macroprolactin (biologically inactive) and the “hook effect” in very high tumors. Dopamine agonists lower results; estrogens, opioids, and antipsychotics raise them.






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