360 Full Body Test Female Panel
This blood test panel bundles female hormones, thyroid, metabolic, lipid, blood count, iron, and inflammation markers to spot patterns and guide next steps.
This panel bundles multiple biomarker tests in one order—your report explains how results fit together.

This is a bundled lab panel, meaning you get many related blood tests from one draw and a results set that’s meant to be read as a pattern—not as a single “good” or “bad” number. The 360 Full Body Test Female Panel is designed to connect the dots between hormones, thyroid function, metabolic health, iron status, inflammation, and core safety markers like kidney and liver enzymes.
Do I need this panel?
You may benefit from this panel if you’re trying to make sense of symptoms that overlap across hormone, thyroid, and metabolic systems—things like irregular cycles, acne or unwanted hair growth, stubborn weight changes, fatigue, sleep disruption, mood shifts, low libido, headaches, or changes in exercise tolerance.
This panel can also be useful when your goals are proactive: you want a baseline before starting or changing hormonal contraception, you’re tracking possible PCOS (polycystic ovary syndrome) patterns, you’re navigating perimenopause, or you’re planning pregnancy and want to understand whether thyroid, iron, or glucose regulation could be part of the picture.
You may also consider a broad panel if you’ve had “normal” results on a single hormone test but still don’t feel right. Many common issues show up as relationships between markers (for example, thyroid markers plus lipids, or fasting insulin plus triglycerides) rather than one out-of-range value.
Your results can support clinician-directed care and shared decision-making, but they can’t diagnose a condition by themselves. If you’re pregnant, postpartum, breastfeeding, have a known endocrine condition, or take prescription hormones or thyroid medication, it’s especially important to interpret this panel in context.
Reference ranges and units can vary by lab, and some hormones change meaningfully across the menstrual cycle; timing and medications matter when you compare results over time.
Lab testing
Order the 360 Full Body Test Female Panel
Schedule online, results typically within about a week
Clear reporting and optional clinician context
HSA/FSA eligible where applicable
Get this panel with Vitals Vault
Vitals Vault makes it straightforward to order a multi-marker lab panel and then make sense of the full results pattern. You can use this panel as a baseline, to investigate symptoms, or to track changes after a targeted plan (nutrition, training, sleep, supplements, or clinician-prescribed therapy).
After your draw, you’ll receive a consolidated results report that lets you see related markers together—so you can connect hormones with thyroid signals, metabolic markers, and foundational health measures like blood counts and liver/kidney function.
If you want help interpreting a complex panel, PocketMD can walk through your results in plain language and help you generate questions to bring to your clinician. This is especially helpful when multiple markers are borderline or moving in opposite directions.
If you’re tracking a transition (for example, postpartum recovery or perimenopause), you can repeat this same panel to compare trends rather than trying to stitch together different test sets from different dates.
- One order, one blood draw, many clinically relevant markers
- Designed for pattern-based interpretation across hormones, thyroid, and metabolism
- PocketMD support for next-step questions and retesting strategy
- Trend-friendly: repeat the same panel to compare changes over time
Key benefits of the 360 Full Body Test Female Panel
- Gives you a broad baseline across female hormones, thyroid markers, and metabolic health in one panel.
- Helps you spot PCOS-like patterns by looking at androgens alongside insulin, glucose, and lipids.
- Supports perimenopause tracking by pairing gonadotropins (FSH/LH) with ovarian hormones and symptom context.
- Clarifies fatigue drivers by combining thyroid signals, iron status, inflammation, and blood counts.
- Improves interpretation of “normal” single tests by showing relationships (for example, thyroid markers with cholesterol or A1c with fasting insulin).
- Creates a safer starting point before making big changes to supplements or hormone protocols by checking liver, kidney, and electrolyte markers.
- Makes retesting simpler by keeping your marker set consistent so you can track trends, not just one-time numbers.
What is the 360 Full Body Test Female Panel?
The 360 Full Body Test Female Panel is a multi-biomarker blood test bundle that measures several categories of health markers at the same time. Instead of focusing on one analyte, it’s built to answer a practical question: what pattern do your hormones, thyroid function, metabolic markers, and foundational health labs form together?
Because many symptoms in women have overlapping causes, a panel approach can reduce guesswork. For example, irregular cycles can relate to ovarian hormone signaling, thyroid function, insulin resistance, elevated androgens, or stress physiology—and those systems can influence each other.
This panel typically includes:
• Female reproductive hormones and related pituitary signals (to understand ovarian function and cycle patterns) • Androgen markers (often relevant for acne, hair changes, and PCOS-like patterns) • Thyroid markers (because thyroid status can mimic or amplify hormone symptoms) • Metabolic and cardiovascular risk markers (glucose, insulin, lipids) • Core safety and “whole-body” labs (blood count, liver/kidney function, electrolytes) • Iron status and inflammation markers (common contributors to fatigue and exercise intolerance)
A key point: many hormones vary by cycle day, time of day, and medication use. A single result is rarely the whole story. The most useful interpretation comes from combining your symptoms, cycle timing, and the overall pattern across the panel.
What do my panel results mean?
Patterns that can look “low” on this panel
A “low” pattern on a multi-marker female panel often means one of two things: (1) lower ovarian hormone output for your life stage and cycle timing (for example, lower estradiol and/or progesterone when you expected them to be higher), or (2) lower metabolic/hematologic reserves (such as low ferritin or anemia markers) that can drive fatigue and hair shedding even when hormones look fine. Low thyroid output patterns can show up as lower free thyroid hormones with a compensatory rise in TSH (thyroid-stimulating hormone), sometimes alongside higher LDL cholesterol. If multiple areas look low at once—like low-normal thyroid hormones plus low ferritin plus low vitamin D—your next step is usually to confirm timing, review medications/supplements, and decide whether targeted follow-up testing is needed rather than assuming a single diagnosis.
Patterns that are often considered “optimal”
An “optimal” panel pattern is less about every value being perfectly centered and more about consistency: results align with your cycle timing, your reproductive stage (reproductive years, postpartum, perimenopause), and your goals. Common examples include thyroid markers that are internally consistent (TSH and free hormones moving together), glucose markers that agree (A1c, fasting glucose, and fasting insulin not sending mixed signals), and lipids that fit your overall metabolic picture. In an optimal pattern, inflammatory markers are generally low, iron stores are adequate without being excessive, and liver/kidney markers support that your body is handling medications, supplements, and training load well.
Patterns that can look “high” on this panel
A “high” pattern can mean different things depending on which cluster is elevated. Higher androgens (like total testosterone, free testosterone, or DHEA-S) alongside higher fasting insulin, higher triglycerides, or lower HDL can suggest an insulin-resistance-driven pattern often seen in PCOS. Higher TSH with lower free thyroid hormones can suggest underactive thyroid signaling, while a low TSH with higher free thyroid hormones can suggest over-replacement or hyperthyroid physiology—both can affect heart rate, anxiety, and cycle regularity. Elevated liver enzymes can reflect medication/supplement effects, alcohol, fatty liver risk, or recent intense exercise; elevated hs-CRP can reflect inflammation from infection, injury, or chronic metabolic stress. The most important step is to interpret “high” values in context—especially if only one marker is elevated while related markers are normal.
Factors that influence your panel results
Cycle timing is one of the biggest drivers of variation: estradiol, progesterone, LH, and FSH can change dramatically across the month, and a result that looks “low” on one day may be expected on another. Hormonal contraception, fertility medications, and hormone therapy can change both absolute values and what “normal” means for you. Thyroid labs can be influenced by biotin supplements, pregnancy/postpartum state, acute illness, and thyroid medication timing. Metabolic markers shift with fasting duration, recent carbohydrate intake, sleep quality, stress, and training load; even a few nights of poor sleep can raise fasting glucose and insulin. Iron markers can change with inflammation, heavy menstrual bleeding, recent iron supplementation, and recent blood donation. When you review results, it helps to note: cycle day, fasting status, time of blood draw, recent illness, major training sessions, and any prescription or supplement changes in the prior 2–4 weeks.
What’s included in this panel
- Absolute Band Neutrophils
- Absolute Basophils
- Absolute Blasts
- Absolute Eosinophils
- Absolute Lymphocytes
- Absolute Metamyelocytes
- Absolute Monocytes
- Absolute Myelocytes
- Absolute Neutrophils
- Absolute Nucleated Rbc
- Absolute Plasma Cells
- Absolute Prolymphocytes
- Absolute Promyelocytes
- Absolute Reactive Lymphocytes
- Albumin
- Albumin/Globulin Ratio
- Alkaline Phosphatase
- Alt
- Amorphous Sediment
- Ana Screen, Ifa
- Anti-Mullerian Hormone (Amh), Female
- Appearance
- Ast
- Bacteria
- Band Neutrophils
- Basophils
- Bilirubin
- Bilirubin, Total
- Blasts
- Bun/Creatinine Ratio
- Calcium
- Calcium Oxalate Crystals
- Carbon Dioxide
- Casts
- Chloride
- Chol/Hdlc Ratio
- Cholesterol, Total
- Color
- Cortisol, Total
- Creatinine
- Crystals
- Dhea Sulfate
- Egfr
- Eosinophils
- Estradiol
- Estrone
- Ferritin
- Fsh
- Ggt
- Globulin
- Glucose
- Granular Cast
- Hdl Cholesterol
- Hematocrit
- Hemoglobin
- Hemoglobin A1C
- Homocysteine
- Hs Crp
- Hyaline Cast
- Insulin
- Iron Binding Capacity
- Iron, Total
- Ketones
- Ldl-Cholesterol
- Ldl/Hdl Ratio
- Leukocyte Esterase
- Lh
- Lipoprotein (A)
- Lymphocytes
- Magnesium
- Mch
- Mchc
- Mcv
- Metamyelocytes
- Monocytes
- Mpv
- Myelocytes
- Neutrophils
- Nitrite
- Non Hdl Cholesterol
- Nucleated Rbc
- Occult Blood
- Ph
- Plasma Cells
- Platelet Count
- Potassium
- Prolymphocytes
- Promyelocytes
- Protein
- Protein, Total
- Rbc
- Rdw
- Reactive Lymphocytes
- Red Blood Cell Count
- Renal Epithelial Cells
- % Saturation
- Sodium
- Specific Gravity
- Squamous Epithelial Cells
- T3, Free
- T4, Free
- Testosterone, Total, Ms
- Thyroglobulin Antibodies
- Thyroid Peroxidase Antibodies
- Transitional Epithelial Cells
- Triglycerides
- Triple Phosphate Crystals
- Tsh
- Urea Nitrogen (Bun)
- Uric Acid
- Uric Acid Crystals
- Vitamin B12
- Vitamin D, 25-Oh, D2
- Vitamin D, 25-Oh, D3
- Vitamin D, 25-Oh, Total
- Wbc
- White Blood Cell Count
- Yeast
- Zinc
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to fast for this panel?
Fasting is often recommended because this panel commonly includes metabolic and lipid markers (like fasting glucose, insulin, and triglycerides) that are easier to interpret when you’ve had no calories for about 8–12 hours. Water is typically fine. If you’re unsure, follow the collection instructions provided with your order.
What cycle day should I test on?
It depends on what you’re trying to learn. Many clinicians time certain reproductive hormones to the early follicular phase (often cycle day 2–5) for baseline signaling, while progesterone is commonly checked in the mid-luteal phase (often about 7 days after ovulation) to evaluate luteal progesterone. If you have irregular cycles, tracking ovulation (or noting bleeding patterns) can make interpretation more accurate. If you’re on hormonal contraception, cycle-day timing may be less meaningful.
Can this panel help with PCOS questions?
This panel can support PCOS pattern recognition because it typically combines androgen markers (like testosterone and DHEA-S) with metabolic markers (like fasting insulin, A1c, and lipids). PCOS is a clinical diagnosis, so your symptoms, ultrasound findings, and medical history still matter. A helpful next step is often to review whether elevated androgens line up with insulin resistance signals and whether thyroid or prolactin abnormalities could be contributing to cycle changes.
How do I read my results if some are normal and some are borderline?
Borderline results are common in broad panels and are often where the most useful insights live. Look for clusters: thyroid markers that agree with each other (or don’t), insulin and triglycerides moving together, ferritin aligning with hemoglobin/MCV, and inflammation markers that might explain shifts in iron or lipids. Your symptoms, cycle timing, and medications can determine whether a borderline value is expected, worth repeating, or worth following up with a more specific test.
Is this panel good for perimenopause?
It can be helpful because perimenopause is often a mix of hormone variability plus changes in sleep, stress physiology, and metabolic health. Gonadotropins (FSH/LH) and estradiol can fluctuate, so a single snapshot may not “confirm” perimenopause. The broader view—thyroid, iron status, glucose regulation, and lipids—can help you separate overlapping contributors to symptoms like fatigue, weight change, and sleep disruption.
Should I order individual tests instead of a panel?
If you have a very specific question (for example, monitoring a known thyroid condition), a targeted test set may be enough. A panel can be more efficient when symptoms are nonspecific or when you want to see relationships across systems—like thyroid plus lipids, or androgens plus insulin. Many people start with a broad panel and then add depth only where the pattern suggests it.
How often should I repeat this panel?
Retesting depends on your goal. For baseline tracking, many people repeat every 6–12 months. If you’re making a meaningful change (starting/stopping hormonal contraception, changing thyroid medication, addressing insulin resistance, or treating iron deficiency), a shorter interval such as 8–16 weeks may be reasonable for certain markers. Cycle-timed hormones may need more intentional scheduling to make comparisons meaningful.