Health Markers
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17-OH Progesterone
17-OH Progesterone is a precursor hormone involved in cortisol and androgen synthesis. For active individuals, this marker may provide insight into how your body manages stress hormones and supports recovery and performance.
ACTH (Adrenocorticotropic Hormone)
ACTH is the pituitary hormone responsible for triggering cortisol release from your adrenal glands. For active individuals, monitoring ACTH may help assess how your body adapts to training stress and supports recovery processes.
AFP (Alpha-Fetoprotein)
AFP (Alpha-Fetoprotein) is a tumor marker that provides insight into your liver function as part of a comprehensive health baseline. For active individuals, monitoring liver health is an important part of understanding how your body responds to training demands and supplementation. This test alone cannot diagnose cancer and should be interpreted by a healthcare professional in context of your full health profile.
ALP (Alkaline Phosphatase)
ALP reflects bone turnover and liver function, both relevant for active individuals. Elevated bone ALP may indicate increased bone remodelling from training stress.
ALT (Alanine Aminotransferase)
ALT is a liver enzyme that active individuals should monitor regularly. Intense training, high-protein diets, and performance supplements can all influence liver enzyme levels, making ALT an important marker for physical health management.
AMH (Anti-Müllerian Hormone)
AMH (Anti-Müllerian Hormone) reflects ovarian reserve and reproductive potential. For active women, monitoring AMH may help assess whether intense training regimens could be influencing hormonal and reproductive health.
AST (Aspartate Aminotransferase)
AST is an enzyme found in muscles and the liver, making it particularly relevant for active individuals. Intense training, resistance exercise, and performance supplements can all raise AST levels, so regular monitoring helps distinguish training-related elevations from potential health concerns.
ASTO (Antistreptolysin O)
ASO levels help identify streptococcal infections that could lead to joint inflammation and affect training. Early detection supports faster return to performance.
Active Vitamin B12
Active Vitamin B12 measures the bioavailable B12 your cells can utilise. For active individuals, B12 may support oxygen transport, energy metabolism, and recovery. This test could help optimise your performance-related nutritional status.
Albumin
Albumin indicates liver health and protein balance, both essential for physical recovery and performance. Low albumin can affect training capacity and recovery.
Amylase
Amylase supports carbohydrate digestion, which is essential for physical fuelling. Monitoring pancreatic enzymes helps ensure optimal nutrient absorption for performance.
Androstenedione
Androstenedione is a precursor hormone converted into testosterone and estrogen. For active individuals, this marker may help assess hormonal pathways that influence muscle development, recovery, and overall physical performance.
ApoA1 (Apolipoprotein A1)
ApoA1 reflects HDL function, which supports cholesterol clearance during the metabolic demands of intense training. A key marker for active individuals monitoring cardiovascular health.
ApoB (Apolipoprotein B)
ApoB provides the most accurate atherogenic particle count for active individuals concerned about long-term cardiovascular health alongside performance.
Basophils
Basophils are the least common white blood cells and play a role in allergic and inflammatory responses, partly by releasing histamine. For active people, long-standing inflammation can affect recovery. A raised count is uncommon and is reviewed together with your other values.
Bicarbonate
Bicarbonate plays a role in buffering lactic acid during intense exercise. Monitoring your levels can help you understand your body's recovery capacity and metabolic efficiency.
Bilirubin (Direct)
Direct bilirubin reflects liver processing efficiency, which is important for active individuals managing high-protein diets, supplements, and intense training loads. Monitoring helps ensure your liver is effectively supporting recovery and nutrient metabolism.
Bilirubin (Total)
Total bilirubin reflects liver health, which is critical for active individuals processing high training loads, performance supplements, and protein-rich diets. Monitoring helps ensure your liver is effectively supporting recovery and metabolic demands.
Blood Type + Rh
A blood type test determines your ABO blood group and Rh factor. Knowing your blood type is essential for safe blood transfusions, organ transplants, and pregnancy planning.
C-Peptide
C-Peptide provides insight into insulin dynamics, which affects energy availability, fat metabolism, and recovery. Active individuals benefit from understanding their metabolic efficiency.
CA 15-3
CA 15-3 is a glycoprotein marker that, when included in a broader panel, provides a more complete baseline for performance-focused individuals. Tracking trends over time supports proactive health management alongside your fitness and recovery goals.
CA 19-9
CA 19-9 is a gastrointestinal marker that contributes to a thorough baseline for performance-focused individuals. Understanding your digestive health markers alongside fitness data provides a more complete view of overall health.
CA 72-4
CA 72-4 is a gastric and ovarian tissue marker that contributes to a thorough baseline health profile for performance-focused individuals.
CA-125
A CA-125 blood test measures the level of cancer antigen 125 in your blood. CA-125 is a protein that can be elevated in ovarian cancer, but it is also commonly raised in many benign conditions such as endometriosis, pelvic inflammatory disease, menstruation, and pregnancy. This test alone cannot diagnose cancer and is not recommended as a screening test for ovarian cancer in the general population. Results should always be interpreted by a healthcare professional in context of other clinical findings.