Lola Health
Core Health 45
£160.00
Core Health 45
Core Health 45 covers 45 essential biomarkers spanning cholesterol, blood sugar, vitamins, iron status, liver and kidney activity, inflammation and hormones. A solid baseline panel for general wellness tracking.
Markers Included
- Albumin: The main protein in blood, helping keep fluid inside blood vessels and carrying hormones and medicines. High levels usually reflect dehydration.
- Ferritin: Reflects the size of your iron reserves. Low ferritin can cause fatigue, hair loss, and eventually low blood oxygen-carrying capacity.
- Globulin: A group of blood proteins that include antibodies and transport proteins.
- Calcium: Vital for bone strength, muscle contraction, nerve signalling, and blood clotting.
- Corrected Calcium: Adjusts the measured calcium level for albumin, since calcium is partly protein-bound.
- Cholesterol: The sum of all cholesterol-carrying particles in the blood. High levels can increase long-term cardiovascular risk.
- HDL: "Good" cholesterol that helps remove excess cholesterol from arteries.
- HDL Cholesterol %: The percentage of total cholesterol that is HDL.
- HDL:Cholesterol Ratio: HDL divided by total cholesterol. Higher ratios indicate a greater share of protective HDL.
- LDL (Low-Density Lipoprotein) Cholesterol: Often called "bad" cholesterol. High LDL is associated with cardiovascular changes over time.
- Non-HDL Cholesterol: Total cholesterol minus HDL.
- Triglycerides: A type of fat carried in the blood. Influenced by recent meals, alcohol, weight, activity and metabolic health.
- HbA1c: Reflects your average blood sugar over the previous 2 to 3 months.
- Basophils: A type of white blood cell involved in inflammatory and allergic responses.
- Eosinophils: A type of white blood cell active in allergic responses and against parasites.
- Haematocrit: The proportion of blood made up of red blood cells.
- Haemoglobin: The iron-containing protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen.
- Lymphocytes: White blood cells central to the immune system's adaptive response.
- MCHC: The average concentration of haemoglobin in red blood cells.
- Mean Cell Hb: The average amount of haemoglobin per red blood cell.
- Mean Cell Volume: The average size of red blood cells.
- MPV (Mean Platelet Volume): The average size of platelets.
- Monocytes: White blood cells involved in immune surveillance and resolution of inflammation.
- Neutrophils: The most common type of white blood cell, involved in fighting infection.
- Platelets: Small blood cells essential for clotting and wound healing.
- RBC: Red blood cells carry oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body.
- Red Cell Distribution: A measure of variation in red blood cell size.
- WBC: White blood cells are part of the immune system, fighting infection and supporting healing.
- CRP: C-reactive protein is made by the liver in response to inflammation or infection.
- Uric Acid: A by-product of how the body processes purines from food.
- Creatinine: A waste product from muscle metabolism that the kidneys filter out.
- eGFR: An estimate of how efficiently your kidneys filter blood.
- Urea: A waste product from protein breakdown, cleared by the kidneys.
- Alkaline Phosphatase: An enzyme found mainly in liver and bone.
- ALT: A liver enzyme released when liver cells are under stress.
- Total Bilirubin: A pigment produced when red blood cells are recycled.
- Total Protein: The combined amount of albumin and globulin in blood plasma.
- Oestradiol: The main form of oestrogen.
- Testosterone: An androgen hormone involved in muscle, bone, mood and libido.
- Free Androgen Index: A ratio of total testosterone to SHBG.
- Free Testosterone (Calculated): The biologically active fraction of testosterone.
- Active B12: The biologically usable form of vitamin B12.
- Magnesium: A mineral involved in muscle and nerve function, energy and sleep.
- Vitamin D (25 OH): A fat-soluble vitamin that supports calcium absorption, bone health and immune function.
- Gamma GT: A liver enzyme particularly responsive to alcohol intake and certain medications.
General educational content. Marker descriptions are wellness-oriented and not personalised medical advice. Your doctor's review accompanies your result with the clinical interpretation.