Tired All The Time
€279
Address common causes of fatigue including nutritional deficiencies and thyroid function Includes Full Blood Count, Infection & Inflammation, Nutritional , Iron Status, Thyroid Health, Heart Health, Bone Health, Kidney Health, & Diabetes Health.
Bone Health
Bones provide structural support for the body and protect delicate organs and tissues. Bones require calcium and vitamin D to remain strong and healthy. Bone Health helps evaluate levels of bone-strength factors and identify individuals at risk of osteoporosis.
Vitamin D
Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP)
Calcium (adjusted)
Phosphate
Diabetes Health
Diabetes markers assess your body's ability to regulate blood sugar and diagnose various stages of glucose metabolism disorders ranging from prediabetes to established diabetes with complications. Key tests include fasting glucose (immediate snapshot of current blood sugar), HbA1c (average blood sugar over the past 2-3 months), insulin levels (assessing insulin production capacity), and C-peptide (measuring beta cell function in the pancreas).
C-peptide
Glucose
HbA1c
Insulin
Full Blood Count
A Full Blood Count (FBC), also called Complete Blood Count (CBC), is one of the most comprehensive and frequently ordered blood tests, providing detailed information about the three main types of blood cells circulating in your body. Red blood cells carry oxygen to tissues, white blood cells fight infections and disease, and platelets enable blood clotting to stop bleeding. This panel measures not just the quantity of these cells, but also their size, shape, maturity, and hemoglobin content, revealing critical information about your bone marrow function, oxygen-carrying capacity, immune system status, and bleeding risk.
Haemoglobin
Haematocrit
Mean Cell Maemoglobin
Mean Cell Maemoglobin Concentration (MCHC)
Red Blood Cell Mean Cell Volume (MCV)
Red Blood Cell Count
Basophil Count
Lymphocyte Count
Eosinophil Count
Monocyte Count
Neutrophil Count
White Blood Cell Count
Platelet Count
Infection & Inflammation
Infection and inflammation markers detect active infections, identify autoimmune conditions where the immune system attacks your own tissues, and measure chronic inflammatory states that significantly increase risk of heart disease, diabetes, cancer, and Alzheimer's disease. Key biomarkers include C-reactive protein and ESR (general inflammation markers that rise with almost any inflammatory process), white blood cell count and differential (detecting infections and blood disorders), immunoglobulins (measuring antibody production), complement proteins (components of the immune system), and specific antibodies like antistreptol
C-Reactive Protein (CRP)
Iron Status
Iron status assessment provides a comprehensive evaluation of your body's iron stores, iron transport in the bloodstream, and iron utilization for hemoglobin production. This panel typically includes serum iron (the amount of iron currently circulating), ferritin (stored iron in tissues), transferrin (the protein that transports iron), Total Iron Binding Capacity (TIBC), and transferrin saturation. Together, these markers help differentiate between iron deficiency anemia, anemia of chronic disease, and dangerous iron overload conditions like hemochromatosis.
Ferritin
Iron
Transferrin Saturation
Total Iron Binding Capacity (TIBC)
Transferrin
Kidney Health
Kidney function tests evaluate how effectively your kidneys filter waste products from blood, maintain proper electrolyte balance, regulate blood pressure, and produce hormones that control red blood cell production. Core markers include creatinine (a waste product from muscle metabolism), estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate or eGFR (calculated measure of kidney filtering efficiency), blood urea nitrogen or BUN (another waste product), and electrolytes including sodium, potassium, chloride, calcium, and phosphate. Additional specialized markers like cystatin C and uric acid provide supplementary information about kidney function and risk of kidney stone formation.
Chloride
Calcium (adjusted)
Creatinine
Cystatin C
Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR)
Magnesium
Phosphate
Potassium
Sodium
Urea
Nutritional Health
Nutrition is the supply of materials (in the form of food) necessary to allow the body to function normally. Vitamins and minerals support normal growth and help organs and cells to function. Good nutrition is vital for health and wellbeing.
Vitamin D
Albumin
Calcium (adjusted)
Folic acid
Iron
Magnesium
Vitamin B12
Thyroid Health
Thyroid function tests evaluate your thyroid gland's production of hormones that regulate metabolism, energy production, body temperature, heart rate, digestive function, muscle control, brain development, and bone maintenance - essentially affecting every single cell in your body. The comprehensive panel includes TSH (pituitary hormone that regulates the thyroid), Free T4 (the main thyroid hormone circulating in blood), Free T3 (the most active thyroid hormone), and thyroid antibodies including thyroid peroxidase and thyroglobulin antibodies which detect autoimmune thyroid disease. Thyroid disorders are extremely common, affecting approximately 12% of the population at some point during their lifetime, with women affected 5-8 times more frequently than men.
Free Tri-iodothyronine (FT3)
Free Thyroxine (FT4)
Anti-Thyroglobulin Antibody (Anti-Tg)
Anti-Thyroid Peroxidase Antibody (Anti-TPO)
Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
Key health measurements
These simple body measurements give useful context for every health assessment, helping us understand body composition, cardiovascular risk, and changes over time.
Waist
Hip
B.M.I.
B.P.
Weight
Height