Hormonal balance, muscle recovery, iron and oxygen delivery, cardiovascular risk, thyroid function, and nutrient optimization.
This panel includes 23 tests analyzing 66 biomarkers:
Measures liver and kidney function, blood sugar, and electrolyte balance — a foundation check for overall metabolic health.
Counts red and white blood cells and platelets, and breaks down immune cell types — screens for anemia, infection, and clotting issues.
Measures cholesterol and triglycerides to assess your risk of heart disease and stroke.
Counts the actual number of atherogenic particles in your blood — a more predictive cardiac risk marker than LDL cholesterol.
A genetic cardiovascular risk factor independent of standard cholesterol — you only need to test it once in your lifetime.
Your 3-month average blood sugar — the key indicator for prediabetes and diabetes risk.
Evaluates iron levels and your body's capacity to transport iron — screens for iron-deficiency anemia and overload.
Measures your body's iron stores — a more sensitive early marker of iron deficiency than serum iron alone.
An enzyme released when muscle is damaged — used by athletes to monitor overtraining and recovery.
The primary female sex hormone — key for reproductive, bone, and cardiovascular health.
Supports pregnancy and balances estrogen — best measured on day 19–21 of a regular cycle.
Your primary stress hormone — a morning draw reflects your adrenal function and recovery capacity.
The primary thyroid screening test — affects energy, weight, mood, and metabolism.
The active thyroid hormone — shows how much your body is actually using, not just producing.
The main thyroid hormone your thyroid makes — converts to active T3 in tissues.
Complete testosterone picture — measures both bound and bioavailable hormone plus the carrier protein that regulates it.
An amino acid linked to cardiovascular risk and B-vitamin status when elevated.
An essential B vitamin — critical for cell division, red blood cells, and pregnancy health.
An essential mineral for muscle, nerve, and bone health — low levels show up as cramps, fatigue, and poor sleep.
Screens for gout risk and kidney function — elevated levels are also linked to metabolic syndrome.
Assesses bone health, immune function, and energy — the most common nutrient deficiency in the US.
Essential for nerve function, energy, and healthy red blood cell production.
Supports immune function, wound healing, hormone production, and skin health.