Type
Blood Testing
Biomarkers
9
Duration
15 min
A broad-spectrum health screening panel measuring haemoglobin, CRP, BSE, fasting glucose, TSH, eGFR, ALAT, ASAT, and vitamin D. Covers inflammatory markers, thyroid function, liver enzymes, kidney filtration, blood sugar, and vitamin D status in a single fasting blood draw.
This panel is OneDayClinic's most comprehensive general health screen, designed to provide a broad overview of the body's major organ systems and metabolic function in a single visit. The nine markers span the domains most commonly evaluated in an annual health assessment: inflammation, thyroid function, liver health, kidney filtration, blood sugar regulation, and vitamin D status. Haemoglobin indicates oxygen-carrying capacity and can flag anaemia. CRP (C-reactive protein) and BSE (erythrocyte sedimentation rate) are complementary inflammatory markers — CRP responds rapidly to acute inflammation while BSE reflects more chronic patterns. Fasting glucose provides a snapshot of blood sugar control. TSH screens for thyroid dysfunction, which affects metabolism, energy, mood, and body weight. ALAT and ASAT are liver transaminases that rise when liver cells are stressed or damaged. eGFR (estimated glomerular filtration rate) assesses how well the kidneys are filtering waste from the blood. Vitamin D rounds out the panel as the most commonly deficient nutrient in the Dutch population. Fasting is required for accurate glucose measurement — the clinic recommends no food for 10 to 12 hours before the appointment, with water permitted. This panel serves as an excellent annual baseline for health-conscious individuals and can identify early warning signs across multiple systems before symptoms develop.
Key Details
- Biomarkers
- 9
- Fasting
- Required
- Results
- Next business day
- Lab
- ISO 15189 certified
Who Is This For?
Annual health check-up, broad-spectrum organ function screening, early detection of metabolic and inflammatory changes
What's Included
Preparation Required
Fasting required: no food for 10-12 hours before the blood draw. Water is permitted.
