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Advanced Female Profile

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76 parameters

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Complete Hemogram (28), HbA1c, Average Blood Glucose, Total Cholesterol, HDL Cholesterol, Non-HDL Cholesterol, Triglycerides, LDL Cholesterol, VLDL Cholesterol, TC / HDL Cholesterol Ratio, LDL / HDL Cholesterol Ratio, Homocysteine, Lipoprotein (A), Apolipoprotein - AI, Apolipoprotein - B, A-Reactive Protein (hs-CRP), Apo-AI/Apo-B Ratio, Calcium, Uric Acid, Blood Urea Nitrogen, Serum Creatinine, BUN / Creatinine Ratio, Urea, eGFR, Bilirubin - Total, Bilirubin - Direct, Bilirubin - Indirect, SGOT (AST), SGPT (ALT), Alkaline Phosphatase, Gamma Glutamyl Transferase, Protein - Total, Serum Albumin, Serum Globulin, Serum Albumin / Globulin Ratio, Total T3, Total T4, TSH, Vitamin B12, 25 OH Vitamin D, Folic Acid, Serum Iron, Total Iron Binding Capacity (TIBC), Transferrin Saturation, Anti CCP (ACCP), Prolactin, Estradiol, Follicle Stimulating Hormone (FSH), Luteinizing Hormone (LH)

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1. Iron Deficiency Profile (3 Tests)

  • Serum Iron
    What: Measures circulating iron in the blood.
    Why: Identifies iron deficiency or overload.
    How: Blood sample.
    When: If fatigue, pallor, or suspected anemia.
  • Total Iron Binding Capacity (TIBC)
    What: Reflects the capacity of transferrin to bind iron.
    Why: Helps differentiate between types of anemia.
    How: Blood test.
    When: With low serum iron or high ferritin levels.
  • % Transferrin Saturation
    What: Percentage of transferrin saturated with iron.
    Why: Assesses iron transport and storage efficiency.
    How: Calculated from iron and TIBC levels.
    When: For anemia diagnosis or chronic disease.

2. Liver Profile (11 Tests)

Assesses liver enzymes, proteins, and bilirubin to evaluate liver function or damage.

  • Includes: Bilirubin (Total, Direct, Indirect), SGOT (AST), SGPT (ALT), Alkaline Phosphatase, Gamma GT, Total Protein, Albumin, Globulin, A/G Ratio.
  • Why: Detects liver inflammation, hepatitis, fatty liver, bile duct obstruction, or cirrhosis.
  • How: Blood sample.
  • When: When symptoms like jaundice, fatigue, nausea, or abnormal imaging appear.

3. Vitamin Profile (3 Tests)

  • 25 OH Vitamin D
    What: Assesses vitamin D status.
    Why: Screens for deficiency linked to bone weakness, fatigue.
    When: In suspected deficiency or chronic illness.
  • Vitamin B12
    Why: Detects pernicious anemia, fatigue, or neurological symptoms.
  • Folic Acid
    Why: Required for red blood cell formation; low in pregnancy or anemia.

4. Cholesterol Profile (8 Tests)

Assesses lipid status and cardiovascular risk.

  • What: Total Cholesterol, HDL, Non-HDL, LDL, VLDL, Triglycerides, and key risk ratios (TC/HDL, LDL/HDL).
  • Why: Predicts heart disease, stroke risk, and monitors diet/therapy response.
  • How: Blood sample, fasting preferred.
  • When: Routinely from age 35+ or earlier if risk factors present.

5. Hormonal Profile (7 Tests)

  • Total T3, Total T4, TSH: Evaluates thyroid gland.
  • Prolactin: High levels may cause infertility, amenorrhea.
  • Estradiol: Female sex hormone; assesses ovarian function.
  • FSH, LH: Regulate reproductive function; tested for fertility, menopause.

6. Complete Hemogram (28 Tests)

  • What: Measures red and white blood cells, platelets, hemoglobin, and indices.
  • Why: Detects infection, anemia, leukemia, inflammation.
  • When: Basic, broad health screening or in diagnostic workups.

7. Diabetic Screen (2 Tests)

  • HbA1c: Reflects 2–3 month average glucose.
  • Average Blood Glucose: Derived from HbA1c.
  • Why: Diagnoses and monitors diabetes.

8. Kidney Profile (7 Tests)

  • Includes: Calcium, Uric Acid, BUN, Creatinine, BUN/Creatinine Ratio, Urea, eGFR.
  • Why: Evaluates filtration efficiency and metabolic waste clearance.
  • When: In hypertension, diabetes, or urinary symptoms.

9. Advanced Cardiac Risk Marker (6 Tests)

  • Homocysteine: Elevated levels linked to vascular disease.
  • Lipoprotein (a): Genetic risk factor for atherosclerosis.
  • Apolipoprotein AI & B: HDL and LDL carriers—better markers than cholesterol alone.
  • hs-CRP: Inflammation marker—predictive of heart attack risk.
  • Apo-AI/Apo-B Ratio: Indicates balance of good vs bad lipoproteins.

10. Anti-CCP (ACCP)

  • What: Detects cyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies.
  • Why: Highly specific test for rheumatoid arthritis, especially early-stage.
  • How: Blood sample.
  • When: Joint stiffness, swelling, or RA suspicion.

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