Anti Aging 4 Comprehensive Panel
Anti Aging 4 Comprehensive is a blood test panel covering lipids, glucose control, inflammation, thyroid, hormones, liver and kidney markers for longevity.
This panel bundles multiple biomarker tests in one order—your report explains how results fit together.

Anti Aging 4 Comprehensive is a bundled lab panel designed to give you a high-signal snapshot of longevity-relevant physiology in one order: cardiometabolic risk, inflammation, thyroid status, key hormones, and organ function. It is built for people who want a repeatable baseline you can trend over years without chasing every possible biomarker.
Do I need this panel?
You might consider the Anti Aging 4 Comprehensive panel if you want a single, structured set of labs that covers the “big rocks” for long-term health: cholesterol and lipoproteins, blood sugar control, inflammatory burden, thyroid signaling, and liver/kidney function. It is especially useful if you are building a multi-year baseline and want a consistent panel you can retest and compare over time.
This panel can also be a good fit if you are making lifestyle changes (nutrition, training, sleep, alcohol reduction, weight loss, stress management) and you want objective feedback beyond the scale. Many longevity-relevant improvements show up first as shifts in triglycerides, fasting insulin, A1c, hs-CRP, and liver enzymes.
If you already have a recent comprehensive metabolic and lipid workup, you may not need the full depth right away. In that case, a smaller baseline panel can be enough, and you can “tier up” later if your results suggest it.
Your results are most useful when they are interpreted together and in the context of your history, medications, and goals. This panel supports clinician-directed care and informed self-advocacy, but it is not a stand-alone diagnosis.
This panel combines multiple standard blood tests; reference ranges and methods can vary by lab, so focus on trends and patterns across markers rather than a single isolated value.
Lab testing
Order the Anti Aging 4 Comprehensive 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 longevity-oriented lab panel and get a clean, organized view of your results. Instead of piecing together separate tests, this bundle is designed to cover the most actionable categories that tend to move with lifestyle and preventive care.
After your blood draw, you can review results as a system: cardiometabolic markers (lipids, glucose/insulin), inflammation, thyroid, and organ function. That “pattern view” is what helps you decide whether you should stay the course, tighten one lever (like sleep or alcohol), or add targeted follow-up testing.
If you want help prioritizing what matters most, PocketMD can help you translate a multi-marker report into next steps and a sensible retest cadence—so you are not reacting to every out-of-range flag without context.
- Designed for trending: repeatable markers that are meaningful to track over time
- One order for multiple categories (metabolic, inflammatory, thyroid, hormones, organ function)
- Optional PocketMD support to interpret patterns and plan follow-ups
- Built to reduce “panel overload” by focusing on signal over noise
Key benefits of Anti Aging 4 Comprehensive
- Creates a longevity-focused baseline you can trend year over year from a single panel.
- Surfaces cardiometabolic risk patterns (lipids plus glucose/insulin markers) that often change before symptoms.
- Helps distinguish “normal weight” from “metabolically healthy” by pairing A1c with fasting insulin and triglycerides.
- Adds an inflammation anchor (hs-CRP) to contextualize recovery, illness, and long-term risk.
- Checks thyroid signaling alongside symptoms like fatigue, cold intolerance, or unexplained weight change.
- Includes liver and kidney markers to support safe planning around supplements, training load, and medications.
- Makes it easier to prioritize follow-up testing by showing which category is driving the overall risk pattern.
What is the Anti Aging 4 Comprehensive panel?
Anti Aging 4 Comprehensive is a multi-biomarker blood test panel that bundles several common lab tests into one order. The goal is not to measure “everything,” but to cover the categories that most reliably reflect longevity-relevant physiology and respond to interventions: cardiometabolic health, inflammation, thyroid function, sex and adrenal-related hormones, and basic organ function.
Because aging is not one pathway, a panel approach matters. For example, an LDL-related marker may look acceptable while fasting insulin and triglycerides suggest insulin resistance. Or your A1c may be normal while hs-CRP is persistently elevated, pointing you toward sleep, recovery, dental health, or other inflammation drivers.
This panel is best used as a baseline and a trend tool. Single results can be noisy due to recent illness, travel, training load, alcohol intake, menstrual cycle timing, or medication changes. Repeating the same panel under similar conditions helps you separate signal from short-term fluctuations.
What this panel is designed to capture
You are looking at a “systems check” across a few high-yield domains: (1) lipids and lipoproteins for atherosclerotic risk, (2) glucose and insulin markers for metabolic flexibility and insulin resistance, (3) hs-CRP as a broad inflammation signal, (4) thyroid markers that influence energy, temperature regulation, and lipid metabolism, (5) hormone markers that can shift with age, stress, sleep, and body composition, and (6) liver/kidney function markers that affect how your body processes nutrients, medications, and supplements.
How to use it without getting overwhelmed
A practical way to read a comprehensive panel is to start with patterns: Are multiple markers pointing in the same direction? Do the results match your recent lifestyle and training? Which category is most likely to change with your next 8–12 weeks of effort? If only one marker is off while the rest of the category looks stable, it is often smarter to confirm with a repeat test than to overhaul your routine based on a single data point.
What do my panel results mean?
When results look “low” across the panel
In a longevity panel, “low” can mean different things depending on the category. Lower fasting glucose and A1c can be favorable, but very low fasting insulin paired with fatigue, weight loss, or low triglycerides may reflect under-fueling, high training load, or recent caloric restriction. Lower thyroid markers (for example, low free T4 or low-normal TSH with symptoms) can align with hypothyroid patterns, but they can also shift with illness, calorie deficit, or certain medications. If multiple hormone markers are low (such as testosterone or estradiol patterns) alongside low energy and reduced performance, it may be a signal to review sleep, stress, nutrition, and medication/supplement use before assuming a primary endocrine problem.
When results look optimal and consistent
An “optimal” pattern is usually a cluster: favorable lipid markers (often including lower triglycerides and non-HDL cholesterol), stable glucose control (A1c and fasting glucose in a healthy range) with fasting insulin that is not elevated, low hs-CRP in the absence of recent infection or injury, and liver/kidney markers that are within range and stable over time. Thyroid markers that align with your symptoms and a steady resting heart rate/temperature pattern often add confidence that your baseline is reliable. When most categories look good, the highest-value next step is usually consistency: keep the same panel and retest on a predictable schedule so you can detect drift early.
When results look “high” or risk-leaning across the panel
Higher-risk patterns often show up as combinations rather than a single red flag. Examples include elevated triglycerides plus low HDL (a common insulin resistance pattern), fasting insulin that is high even when fasting glucose is still normal, or A1c trending upward over time. Inflammation can amplify risk interpretation: an elevated hs-CRP alongside adverse lipid or glucose markers suggests you should look for modifiable inflammation drivers (sleep debt, excess alcohol, overtraining, untreated apnea, chronic infections, gum disease) while you address nutrition and activity. High liver enzymes (ALT/AST) together with higher triglycerides can point toward fatty liver risk, especially when paired with central weight gain. The most useful move is to identify the dominant category—metabolic, inflammatory, thyroid, or organ function—and plan a focused follow-up rather than trying to change everything at once.
Factors that influence panel markers (and how to avoid false alarms)
Many results shift with timing and context. Hard training in the 24–72 hours before your draw can raise inflammatory markers and sometimes liver enzymes; alcohol in the days before testing can raise triglycerides and affect liver markers; poor sleep can worsen glucose control and inflammation; and acute illness can temporarily distort thyroid and lipid markers. Medications and supplements also matter (for example, thyroid hormone, statins, GLP-1 medications, testosterone therapy, oral contraceptives, corticosteroids, creatine, and high-dose biotin can all influence interpretation). For the cleanest trend, try to test under similar conditions each time—morning draw, consistent fasting window if instructed, and a “typical week” of diet, sleep, and training.
What’s included in this panel
- % Saturation
- Amorphous Sediment
- Appearance
- Bacteria
- Bilirubin
- Calcium Oxalate Crystals
- Casts
- Color
- Crystals
- Dhea Sulfate
- Estradiol
- Estrogens, Total, Ia
- Folate, Serum
- Fsh
- Glucose
- Granular Cast
- Growth Hormone (Gh)
- Homocysteine
- Hyaline Cast
- Igf 1, Lc/Ms
- Iron Binding Capacity
- Iron, Total
- Ketones
- Leukocyte Esterase
- Lh
- Nitrite
- Occult Blood
- Ph
- Progesterone
- Protein
- Psa, Total
- Rbc
- Renal Epithelial Cells
- Sex Hormone Binding Globulin
- Specific Gravity
- Squamous Epithelial Cells
- T3, Free
- T4, Free
- Testosterone, Free
- Testosterone, Total, Ms
- Transitional Epithelial Cells
- Triple Phosphate Crystals
- Uric Acid Crystals
- Vitamin A (Retinol)
- Vitamin B12
- Wbc
- Yeast
- Z Score (Female)
- Z Score (Male)
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to fast for the Anti Aging 4 Comprehensive panel?
Fasting is commonly recommended because triglycerides, glucose, and insulin are easier to interpret when you have not eaten recently. Follow the collection instructions you receive with your order, and try to keep your fasting window consistent when you retest so your trends are comparable.
How often should you repeat a longevity lab panel like this?
Many people retest every 3–6 months when actively changing lifestyle or medications, and every 6–12 months once results are stable. If a value is unexpectedly abnormal (especially after illness, travel, or a hard training block), a shorter-interval repeat may be more useful than making big changes based on one draw.
How do I read so many results without getting biomarker anxiety?
Start with categories and patterns: (1) lipids/lipoproteins, (2) glucose and insulin, (3) inflammation, (4) thyroid, and (5) liver/kidney function. If one marker is out of range but the rest of that category is stable and you feel well, confirmation with a repeat test is often the most rational next step. PocketMD can help you prioritize what matters most for your goals.
Is this panel better than ordering tests individually?
A panel is usually easier to trend and interpret because it intentionally groups markers that explain each other (for example, pairing A1c with fasting insulin, or lipids with inflammation). Ordering individually can make sense if you already have a baseline and only need to monitor one category, but it can also create blind spots if you do not check the related markers that provide context.
What if one marker is high but everything else looks good?
Single-marker outliers happen. Recent exercise, alcohol, dehydration, supplements, and minor infections can move results. The next step is usually to check whether the marker fits the broader pattern (for example, high hs-CRP with otherwise favorable metabolic markers may reflect a short-term inflammatory event) and decide whether to repeat under more typical conditions.
Can medications and supplements change my results?
Yes. Lipid-lowering medications, thyroid hormone, testosterone therapy, oral contraceptives, GLP-1 medications, corticosteroids, and even high-dose biotin can affect lab values or how they are measured. Bring a complete list of what you take (including doses and timing) when you review your panel so interpretation is accurate.