Complete Wellness Panel
Type
Blood Testing
Biomarkers
18
Duration
15 min
Results
48 hours
18-biomarker comprehensive wellness panel covering lipids, thyroid, hormones, metabolic markers, growth factors, blood count, iron, and key vitamins.
The Complete Wellness Panel is Express Pathology's broadest health screen, covering 18+ biomarkers across the major body systems that determine how you feel, perform, and age. It combines the depth of specialist panels — hormones, thyroid, metabolic — into a single comprehensive draw. The lipid profile (MBA, HDL, LDL) and metabolic markers (HbA1c, fasting insulin) assess cardiovascular risk and glucose metabolism. Full thyroid function (TSH, T3, T4) catches subclinical dysfunction that TSH-only screening commonly misses. The hormonal panel is unusually thorough for a general wellness screen: free and total testosterone, SHBG, LH, FSH, oestradiol, prolactin, progesterone, cortisol, DHEAS, growth hormone, and IGF-1. Iron studies and full blood count with ESR address the most common causes of unexplained fatigue. Vitamin B12 and D round out the nutritional picture with the two micronutrients most frequently deficient in Australian adults. This panel is tagged for both men's and women's health and suits anyone wanting a thorough baseline without needing to choose between multiple smaller panels. Results are doctor-reviewed and returned within 24-48 hours.
Key Details
- Biomarkers
- 18+
- Results
- 24-48 hours
- Referral
- No GP needed
- Home visit
- +$75 AUD
Who Is This For?
Comprehensive annual health screen, hormonal and metabolic baseline, men's and women's wellness, fatigue investigation
What's Included
Preparation Required
Fast for 8-12 hours before blood draw (water OK). Morning blood draw recommended for accurate hormone, cortisol, and insulin results.
Biomarkers Tested
20The iron-rich protein in red blood cells responsible for carrying oxygen throughout your body and returning carbon dioxide to the lungs. Low haemoglobin is the primary marker for anemia and can cause fatigue, weakness, and shortness of breath.
Measures the number of red blood cells in your blood. Red blood cells carry oxygen from your lungs to every cell in your body. Abnormal levels can indicate anemia, dehydration, or bone marrow disorders.
Measures the total number of white blood cells, your body's primary defense against infection. Elevated levels may indicate infection, inflammation, or immune disorders, while low levels can signal bone marrow problems or autoimmune conditions.
Measures the number of platelets, small cell fragments essential for blood clotting. Low platelets increase bleeding risk, while high platelets may increase clot risk. Important for monitoring clotting disorders and medication effects.
The percentage of your blood volume occupied by red blood cells. It reflects the balance between red blood cell production and loss, helping diagnose anemia, dehydration, and polycythemia.
The average size of your red blood cells. Small cells (microcytic) suggest iron deficiency, while large cells (macrocytic) may indicate vitamin B12 or folate deficiency. Normal-sized cells with low count suggest chronic disease.
The average amount of hemoglobin in each red blood cell. Low MCH indicates that red blood cells carry less oxygen than normal, commonly seen in iron-deficiency anemia.
The most abundant type of white blood cell, forming the first line of defense against bacterial and fungal infections. Elevated neutrophils typically indicate active infection or inflammation.
Measures the number of lymphocytes, including B cells and T cells that drive adaptive immunity. Elevated levels may indicate viral infections, while low levels can signal immune deficiency or HIV.
Measures monocytes, the largest white blood cells. They mature into macrophages in tissues, where they engulf pathogens and dead cells. Elevated monocytes can indicate chronic infection or inflammatory conditions.
Measures eosinophils, white blood cells involved in fighting parasitic infections and mediating allergic responses. Elevated levels are associated with allergies, asthma, parasitic infections, and certain autoimmune conditions.
The rarest type of white blood cell, involved in allergic reactions and inflammatory responses. Basophils release histamine and heparin, contributing to immediate hypersensitivity reactions.
A waste product from normal muscle metabolism, filtered by the kidneys. Blood creatinine levels reflect kidney filtration capacity. Elevated levels may indicate impaired kidney function, dehydration, or excessive muscle breakdown.
A waste product from protein breakdown, processed by the liver and excreted by the kidneys. Elevated urea levels can indicate kidney dysfunction, dehydration, high-protein diet, or gastrointestinal bleeding.
Blood sugar — the body's primary energy source. Fasting glucose screens for diabetes and prediabetes. Chronically elevated glucose damages blood vessels and organs. Levels fluctuate with meals, stress, and physical activity.
Reflects your average blood sugar over the past 2–3 months by measuring the percentage of hemoglobin with attached glucose. HbA1c is the gold standard for diagnosing and monitoring diabetes, unaffected by daily fluctuations.
The combined measure of all cholesterol in your blood, including HDL, LDL, and VLDL. While useful as an overview, the breakdown between HDL and LDL is more clinically meaningful for assessing cardiovascular risk.
Often called 'bad' cholesterol, LDL deposits cholesterol in artery walls, contributing to plaque buildup and atherosclerosis. LDL is the primary target for cardiovascular risk reduction through diet, exercise, and medication.
Often called 'good' cholesterol, HDL carries cholesterol away from arteries back to the liver for removal. Higher HDL levels are protective against heart disease. Exercise, healthy fats, and moderate alcohol intake can raise HDL.
The most common type of fat in the body, stored for energy. Elevated triglycerides — often from excess sugar, alcohol, or calories — increase cardiovascular risk and can cause pancreatitis at very high levels.
- Category
- Diagnostic
- Sample Type
- Blood (venous draw)
- Duration
- 15 min
- Results
- 48 hours
