Comprehensive Health Profile Men S Panel
This blood test panel checks key heart, metabolic, liver, kidney, thyroid, blood count, and inflammation markers to help you set a clear baseline.
This panel bundles multiple biomarker tests in one order—your report explains how results fit together.

This is a multi-biomarker lab panel designed to give you a practical, first-pass snapshot of common health systems—cardiometabolic risk, organ function, thyroid signaling, inflammation, and basic blood counts—using one blood draw. It’s built for people who want a clear baseline (or a smarter “annual labs” refresh) without guessing which individual tests to pick.
Do I need this panel?
You may benefit from the Comprehensive Health Profile Men S panel if you want a broad baseline you can actually use—especially if you have a family history of heart disease, diabetes, thyroid disease, or kidney problems, or you have not had labs in the last 12–24 months.
This panel can also be helpful when you feel “off” but don’t have a clear single symptom to chase. Patterns across cholesterol, blood sugar/insulin signals, thyroid markers, blood counts, and inflammation can sometimes explain why you feel fatigued, why your weight is shifting, why your workouts feel harder, or why your blood pressure is trending up—even when one isolated test looks “normal.”
You may want to prioritize this panel if you are starting (or changing) a nutrition plan, training program, weight-loss strategy, or medication/supplement routine and you want objective before-and-after data.
Your results are educational and are best used to support clinician-directed care—not to self-diagnose. If you have chest pain, shortness of breath, fainting, severe weakness, black/tarry stools, or other urgent symptoms, seek medical care right away rather than relying on a screening panel.
This panel combines multiple standard blood tests; reference ranges and flags can vary by lab, and interpretation is most accurate when you consider your history, medications, and trends over time.
Lab testing
Order the Comprehensive Health Profile Men S 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 lets you order a comprehensive lab panel for men without having to assemble a long list of individual tests. You get a single set of results that’s easier to review as a whole—so you can identify the few numbers that matter most for your next step.
After your results are in, you can use PocketMD to organize questions, understand how markers relate to each other (for example, cholesterol patterns alongside inflammation and blood sugar signals), and decide what to repeat, what to ignore, and what to follow up with more targeted testing.
If your goals sharpen after you see your baseline—like focusing on heart risk, insulin resistance, or performance—you can retest this profile later for trend clarity or add a more specialized panel to go deeper in one area.
- One blood draw with multiple clinically common markers
- Designed for baseline building and repeatable tracking
- PocketMD support for pattern-based interpretation and next-step planning
Key benefits of Comprehensive Health Profile Men S
- Replaces guesswork with a broad baseline across heart, metabolic, thyroid, liver, kidney, and blood count markers.
- Helps you spot patterns that single tests miss (for example, triglycerides + HDL + glucose trends that suggest insulin resistance).
- Clarifies whether “normal” results are truly reassuring or whether borderline clusters deserve attention.
- Creates a repeatable reference point to measure the impact of diet, training, sleep, stress, and medications over time.
- Flags common, actionable issues early—like anemia patterns, kidney filtration changes, liver enzyme elevations, or thyroid shifts.
- Supports smarter follow-up: you can decide whether you need a focused add-on panel (heart, insulin, fitness) instead of repeating everything.
- Makes it easier to prioritize next steps by viewing related markers together rather than as a wall of unrelated numbers.
What is the Comprehensive Health Profile Men S panel?
The Comprehensive Health Profile Men S panel is a bundled set of blood tests that screens several major health “domains” at once. Instead of ordering one biomarker at a time, this panel groups complementary markers so you can interpret them as a system.
Most men use a panel like this for one of two reasons: (1) building a first baseline when you’re not sure what to test, or (2) refreshing your annual labs with enough breadth to catch common problems that develop quietly.
A panel approach matters because many health questions are pattern questions. For example, LDL cholesterol alone is less informative than LDL alongside triglycerides, HDL, inflammation signals, and blood sugar markers. Likewise, a borderline thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) result is easier to interpret when you also see free thyroid hormone levels and your overall metabolic context.
This panel is not a diagnosis by itself. It is a structured snapshot that helps you and your clinician decide whether you can stay the course, make lifestyle adjustments, repeat testing on a schedule, or order targeted follow-ups.
What do my panel results mean?
When parts of the panel are low
“Low” in a comprehensive panel usually means one of three things: a deficiency pattern, reduced production, or dilution/overhydration effects. Examples include low hemoglobin/hematocrit or low red blood cell indices that can point toward anemia patterns (often iron-related, but not always), low total protein/albumin that may reflect nutrition, absorption, or liver/kidney issues, or low thyroid hormones that can align with hypothyroid patterns when paired with an appropriate TSH signal. Low values are not automatically “good” or “bad”—the meaning depends on which markers are low together and whether you have symptoms like fatigue, shortness of breath with exertion, cold intolerance, or reduced exercise capacity.
When results look optimal and consistent
An “optimal” panel is less about every number being perfect and more about the overall pattern being internally consistent: blood counts that fit your hydration and training status, kidney and liver markers that are stable and in range, thyroid markers that align with how you feel, and cardiometabolic markers (lipids and glucose-related results) that support low long-term risk. If most categories are steady and you feel well, this panel becomes a strong baseline to trend—often the most valuable use is repeating it at a sensible interval so small drifts are caught before they become big problems.
When parts of the panel are high
High results often cluster into a few common themes. A cardiometabolic cluster (higher LDL cholesterol, higher triglycerides, lower HDL, and higher glucose signals) can suggest increased insulin resistance risk and higher cardiovascular risk over time. A liver cluster (elevated ALT/AST and sometimes changes in triglycerides) can be seen with alcohol use, medication effects, intense training, or fatty liver patterns. A kidney/dehydration cluster (higher BUN, higher creatinine, higher albumin/total protein) may reflect hydration status, high-protein intake, supplements like creatine, or true kidney function changes—context matters. Inflammation markers trending high can also change how you interpret lipids and symptoms, since inflammation can temporarily shift several lab values.
Factors that influence your panel results
Because this is a multi-marker panel, several everyday factors can move results without indicating disease. Fasting status can affect triglycerides and glucose-related markers. Recent hard exercise can raise AST/ALT and sometimes creatinine. Dehydration can concentrate blood values (albumin, BUN, hematocrit), while overhydration can dilute them. Alcohol intake, sleep loss, acute illness, and chronic stress can shift glucose, inflammation, and liver markers. Medications and supplements matter too—statins, thyroid medication, testosterone therapy, creatine, NSAIDs, and some antibiotics can all influence common labs. The most accurate interpretation comes from combining your results with your recent routine, your symptoms, and prior labs to see what is persistent versus temporary.
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
- 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
- Creatinine
- Crystals
- Egfr
- Eosinophils
- Globulin
- Glucose
- Granular Cast
- Hdl Cholesterol
- Hematocrit
- Hemoglobin
- Hemoglobin A1C
- Hs Crp
- Hyaline Cast
- Ketones
- Ldl-Cholesterol
- Leukocyte Esterase
- Lymphocytes
- 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
- Psa, Total
- Rbc
- Rdw
- Reactive Lymphocytes
- Red Blood Cell Count
- Renal Epithelial Cells
- Sodium
- Specific Gravity
- Squamous Epithelial Cells
- Transitional Epithelial Cells
- Triglycerides
- Triple Phosphate Crystals
- Urea Nitrogen (Bun)
- Uric Acid Crystals
- Vitamin D, 25-Oh, D2
- Vitamin D, 25-Oh, D3
- Vitamin D, 25-Oh, Total
- Wbc
- White Blood Cell Count
- Yeast
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to fast for this panel?
Fasting is often recommended for the cleanest interpretation of triglycerides, insulin, and glucose-related markers. If you can, aim for 8–12 hours of fasting (water is typically fine). If you did not fast, your results can still be useful—just interpret triglycerides and insulin with that context.
How do I read a panel with so many results without getting overwhelmed?
Start by grouping results into categories: (1) cardiometabolic (lipids, ApoB, glucose/insulin/A1c), (2) liver and kidney function (CMP, urinalysis), (3) thyroid (TSH, free T4/T3, antibodies), (4) blood counts and iron status (CBC, ferritin/iron), and (5) inflammation and risk modifiers (hs-CRP, homocysteine, Lp(a)). Then look for clusters that move together, not isolated outliers.
If my labs are “normal” but I still have symptoms, is this panel still useful?
Yes. “Normal” ranges are broad, and symptoms can come from patterns near the edges of range or from mismatches across markers (for example, borderline thyroid markers plus anemia-pattern indices, or cardiometabolic markers trending the wrong direction). This panel can help you decide what to investigate next rather than stopping at one normal result.
Is it better to order a comprehensive panel or pick individual tests?
A comprehensive panel is usually more efficient when you want a baseline or you are not sure what to prioritize. Individual tests make sense when you already know the question (for example, you only need a follow-up A1c, or you are monitoring a known thyroid condition). Many people start broad once, then switch to targeted repeats.
How often should I repeat this panel?
A common approach is every 12 months for general screening, or every 3–6 months when you are actively changing lifestyle, starting a new medication, or following up on abnormal results. Your best interval depends on what changed, how abnormal the results were, and your clinician’s guidance.
Can exercise or supplements change my results?
Yes. Hard training in the days before your draw can raise AST/ALT and sometimes creatinine. Creatine supplementation can raise creatinine without reflecting kidney damage. High-protein intake can affect BUN. Biotin can interfere with some immunoassays in certain settings. Share your training and supplement routine when interpreting results.
What should I do if one marker is flagged high or low?
First, check whether the marker fits a pattern with related tests (for example, LDL with ApoB and triglycerides; iron with ferritin and CBC indices; TSH with free T4/T3). Next, consider temporary influences like fasting, illness, dehydration, alcohol, or recent intense exercise. If a result is significantly abnormal or persistent on repeat testing, follow up with a clinician for diagnosis and a plan.