Fitness Pro dla Kobiet (Fitness Pro Women)
Type
Blood Testing
Biomarkers
18
Duration
30 min
Results
4 days
Active womens sports screening with 20 tests: morphology with manual smear, lipid profile, liver function, creatinine, urinalysis, glucose, iron/ferritin, vitamin B12/folic acid, vitamin D, albumin-creatinine ratio, electrolytes (Na/K), calcium/magnesium, TSH, hormones (FSH/LH/progesterone/estradiol/testosterone/DHEA/DHEA-SO4). For high-intensity training. Includes consultation.
Athletic performance blood panels are designed for active individuals who want to optimize training, recovery, and overall performance through objective biomarker data. These panels go beyond standard health screening to include markers directly relevant to physical performance: iron studies and ferritin (oxygen-carrying capacity), testosterone and cortisol (recovery and adaptation), inflammatory markers like hsCRP (training load impact), vitamin D (bone and muscle function), and metabolic markers. Many professional athletes and Olympic teams use regular blood work to fine-tune training periodization, identify overtraining before it becomes injury, and optimize nutrition strategies for peak performance.
Key Details
Who Is This For?
Professional and competitive athletes wanting to optimize training and recovery. Recreational athletes training 4+ days per week who want data-driven insights. Runners, cyclists, CrossFitters, and strength athletes experiencing unexplained fatigue or performance plateaus. Coaches and trainers looking for objective markers to guide programming.
What's Included
Preparation Required
Fasting for 10–12 hours before your appointment is recommended for accurate results (water is fine). Avoid alcohol for 24 hours and intense exercise for 12 hours before the blood draw. Morning appointments are ideal for consistent hormone and glucose readings. The blood draw typically takes 5–10 minutes.
Biomarkers Tested
18The 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 mineral essential for oxygen transport (in hemoglobin), energy production, and immune function. Serum iron measures the amount circulating in blood, but ferritin and TIBC provide a more complete picture of iron status.
The primary iron storage protein. Ferritin reflects total body iron stores and is the first marker to drop in iron deficiency. However, ferritin also rises with inflammation, infection, and liver disease, which can mask true iron deficiency.
The percentage of transferrin (iron-transporting protein) that is carrying iron. Calculated from serum iron and TIBC. Low saturation indicates iron deficiency; high saturation may indicate hemochromatosis (iron overload).
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.
The primary screening test for thyroid function. TSH is produced by the pituitary gland to regulate thyroid hormone production. High TSH indicates an underactive thyroid (hypothyroidism), while low TSH suggests an overactive thyroid (hyperthyroidism).
Where to get this
View on mapMore from Jutro Medical Poland
Pakiet na Start (Starter Package)
$58.00Basic health screening with 4 tests: urinalysis, complete blood morphology, glucose, ALT. Includes free doctor consultation. No referral needed. Promotional 1 PLN for NFZ registrations, standard 58 PLN. Targets individuals who rarely visit doctors or seek affordable preventive care. Blood sample collection at any Jutro Medical clinic.
Pełna HORMONia (Full Hormonal Balance)
$419.00Thyroid and hormonal disorder diagnostics with 10 tests: TSH, FT4, FT3, anti-TPO, anti-TG, TSH receptor antibodies, sodium, lipid panel (cholesterol/HDL/non-HDL/LDL/TG), morphology, total calcium. Includes free consultation. Targets fatigue, weight changes, psychiatric symptoms linked to thyroid issues.
Every Body (General Health)
$399.00Preventive health assessment with 15 tests: morphology, thyroid (TSH/FT4/FT3), lipid profile, liver function (ALT/AST/ALP/bilirubin/GGTP), creatinine, electrolytes (Na/K), proteinogram, CRP, lipase, ESR, urinalysis. Includes consultation. Emphasizes health beyond body weight - slim does not equal healthy, overweight does not equal unhealthy.
Every Body Rozszerzony (Extended)
$1,049.00Comprehensive body health screening with 16 tests: morphology, thyroid panel (TSH/FT4/FT3/anti-TPO/anti-TG), lipid profile, liver function, creatinine, electrolytes, proteinogram, CRP, lipase, ESR, urinalysis, vitamin D. Includes consultation. For weight-concerned individuals seeking complete assessment.
- Category
- Diagnostic
- Sample Type
- Blood draw
- Duration
- 30 min
- Results
- 4 days
Jutro Medical Poland
Modern primary care network with direct-to-consumer blood testing via online store. 7 preventive packages (58-1,049 PLN): Starter Package, Every Body (basic/extended), Healthy Senior Woman, Menopause, Fitness Pro, Strong Woman. Free doctor consultation included with all packages. No referral needed. Online ordering via sklep. Operating hours Mon-Fri 8:00-18:00. Contact: 570 690 376. Krakow location at Czyzowka 14.