What is prolactin?
Prolactin is a hormone released by the anterior pituitary and largely regulated by dopamine. It follows a daily rhythm, typically rising during sleep and dipping later in the morning. Both women and men produce prolactin, though average levels differ due to hormonal influences.
Why does it matter for long-term health and wellbeing?
Prolactin reflects how effectively the brain coordinates hormonal communication. Steady levels help support energy, mood stability, metabolic harmony, and overall physiological resilience. Monitoring it provides insight into how lifestyle patterns influence your internal balance.
What’s an optimal level of prolactin?
Australian laboratory reference ranges commonly use:
- Females: up to 530 mIU/L
- Males: up to 360 mIU/L
Vively’s optimal insights focus on maintaining prolactin toward the lower-to-mid portion of these reference ranges, where levels tend to be more stable and less impacted by short-term fluctuations.
What influences prolactin levels?
Sleep, stress, exercise, hormonal changes, nutritional patterns, physical intimacy, daily rhythms, and some supplements or medications can influence prolactin. Time of day and recent activity also matter, as levels are naturally pulsatile.
What does it mean if prolactin is outside the optimal range?
Values slightly above or below the optimal window often reflect temporary changes such as stress, sleep disruption, recent exercise, or natural hormonal variation. Persistently higher or lower values simply signal an opportunity to review lifestyle inputs or discuss further testing with a healthcare provider.
How can I support healthy prolactin levels?
Consistent sleep, balanced nutrition, morning testing (to reduce circadian variation), managing stress, and moderating high-intensity exercise before blood draws can help maintain steadier levels. Tracking trends over time offers the clearest picture of how your habits shape hormonal balance.
This information is provided for general health and wellness purposes only and does not replace medical advice.
References
- Better Health Channel. Hormonal (endocrine) system. Victorian State Government.
- National Health and Medical Research Council. Australian Dietary Guidelines. Canberra: NHMRC; 2013.
- National Health and Medical Research Council & Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care. Nutrient Reference Values for Australia and New Zealand (including Recommended Dietary Intakes). 2006.