Understanding Bloodwork
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This place has some good explanations of what you might be looking at.
You can look at the marker library and see some simple explanations.
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@beekind I have some generic advice. Both Google Gemini and Anthropic Claude Opus 4.8 are pretty good at helping you to understand what's going on, and will answer questions, dig into research etc. That said, things to be aware of: Claude Opus 4.8 tends to be very by the book, very traditional medicine interpretation, and occasionally a bit alarmist. I generally find Gemini more useful, but with one caveat. I've sometimes found it interesting to have Claude and Gemini debate each other. In fact, I had a blood draw just last week to settle a bet between the two

One other note, the more you can tell your robot friends about your situation there better. Often lab results have 'muddlers' involving things like what supplements you take, your peptides, etc that can confuse things. If you tell them about those, they can flag them, and sometimes even suggest alternate tests.
One classic example of this is taking creatine as a supplement. There are lots of good reasons to do take it. But the common measure of kidney health, eGFR computed from serum creatinine, will be thrown wildly off by your creatine supplementation. Not because creatine damages the kidney (it doesn't), but because what's its measuring is your absolute level of creatinine, which is raised by creatine supplementation, and so it can make it look like your kidneys are not filtering as well as they are. In some cases, it can look like serious kidney disease (spoliers: it isn't). A common backup marker that it may suggest for that, Cystatin C, can be thrown off by inflammation (so best to run it with an hscrp), etc. If you tell the robot friends what you are doing, and ask good curiousity based questions and volunteer more information as you go - they give pretty stellar advice.
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Can anyone point me to a website or discussion that can help me figure out how to read and understand my rats bloodwork results and how to determine what peptides might be beneficial for those functions to improve?
@BeeKind the question you asked is too broad. There are hundreds, maybe a thousand of different blood tests, for different conditions, for different age, sex, even race.
What you want is a test (tests) to see what is off-normal and then a peptide protocol suggestion specifically for this anomaly to restore it back to a normal range. I wish it was that simple. Maybe in few years, with AI help and personalized health data collection via wearables...
For now, an easy route is to get general tests: CMP, CBC, lipid panel, hsCRP, HbA1c. Start there. Check for their ranges that are included in the report, also check that site I mentioned before. Then go further, go through this list, see what applies to you.
Concerning the peptides and the treatment protocols, it's even more complex, but there are sites around that.
Look for example at this this nice article regarding TA-1 and blood tests on one of those sites. -
Just did my first Rhythm Health test this week. It has an AI to go through your results. Helps A LOT if you give it your health background, don't just log in to any chat and ask how it looks...
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Just did my first Rhythm Health test this week. It has an AI to go through your results. Helps A LOT if you give it your health background, don't just log in to any chat and ask how it looks...
@Stan-Douglas rythm is terrific just took test number 3 this morning. I also asked them to add telomere's
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Ha, I'm actually working on a dashboard right now to try and pull this all together for myself. Of course using AI. It is already starting to find good results. Started out by trying to find which test I should order, then find which vendors that can supply that at best price. I've only been adding more!
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@Stan-Douglas rythm is terrific just took test number 3 this morning. I also asked them to add telomere's
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@Stan-Douglas yes if you are taking Epitalon it’s a good way to see if there is improvement. I do switch arms and have had the same experience with the scab.
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@stevepep do they test for that? Last time i looked into it, I would have to send a blood sample to a separate lab and it cost about $500 by itself. I use function and their biological age isn’t based on telomeres, and I haven’t found a test on there. (Or Quest.)
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@stevepep do they test for that? Last time i looked into it, I would have to send a blood sample to a separate lab and it cost about $500 by itself. I use function and their biological age isn’t based on telomeres, and I haven’t found a test on there. (Or Quest.)
@ResearchCat they responded to the request and said it’s under consideration. Rythm isn’t cheap it’s a subscription thats over $100 a month
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