| # | Test | Biomed name | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CBC | CBC/Hg | $2.50 |
| 2 | Ferritin | Ferritin | $7.50 |
| 3 | CRP hs | CRP hs( C-Reactive Protein ) Quantitative | $1.75 |
| 4 | Total IgA | IgA | $10.00 |
| 5 | AST + ALT | SGOT,SGPT (Transaminase) | $1.50 |
| 6 | GGT | GGT | $1.25 |
| 7 | Bilirubin | Bilirubin T, D & I | $2.00 |
| 8 | Alkaline Phosphatase | Alkaline Phosphatase/PAL | $1.25 |
| 9 | Lipid Panel | Bilan Lipid (Lipid Profiles, Lipid Panel) | $5.75 |
| 10 | ApoB | APO lipoprotein B | $12.50 |
| 11 | Vitamin B12 | Vitamin B12 (Cyanocobalamin) | $17.50 |
| 12 | Lipase | Lipase | $6.00 |
| 13 | Amylase | Amylase/Blood | $1.50 |
| 14 | Vitamin D | Vitamin D Total (25-Hydroxyvitamin D) | $30.00 |
| 15 | TSH | TSH ultra sensitive | $7.00 |
| 16 | PSA | PSA Total | $10.00 |
| 17 | Gastrin | Gastrin | $19.50 |
| 18 | ESR | ESR / Vs | $1.00 |
| 19 | TIBC | TIBC | $7.75 |
| 20 | Transferrin Saturation | Transferrin Saturation | $12.50 |
| 21 | ABO Blood Group & Rh | ABO Blood group and Rhesus | $2.00 |
| 22 | Magnesium | Magnesium/Blood | $1.50 |
| 23 | Creatinine | Creatinine/Blood | $1.25 |
| 24 | Electrolytes | Electrolyte (Na+, K+, Cl-) / Blood | $5.00 |
| 25 | HbA1c | A1c (Hemoglobin A1c) | $8.75 |
For you this is high-yield because hemoglobin was 13.1, MCV has drifted down, and platelets have stayed high, which fits possible iron loss plus chronic gut irritation. Expected result: still-normal hemoglobin with early iron-deficiency clues, or a clearer drop that strengthens the case for ongoing occult blood loss.
This matters a lot because ferritin has fallen from about 94 to 35 with fatigue and brain fog on top of a prior diverticular bleed history. Expected result: still low, possibly low-20s to 30s; below 30 would strongly support true iron loss.
This helps separate mild chronic background inflammation from something more active, especially with bloating, eczema, prior calprotectin elevation, and high platelets. Expected result: mildly elevated around your recent 2-3 mg/L range rather than a big jump.
Relevant because chronic bloating plus falling iron stores keeps celiac on the rule-out list despite an old negative test. Expected result: normal, which would make any future tTG IgA result trustworthy.
Relevant because recent alcohol re-exposure worsened the gut and you are also on atorvastatin. Expected result: still normal, supporting a gut-heavy rather than liver-heavy problem.
Useful because you recently stopped drinking again after a period that clearly worsened your bloating. Expected result: normal or only mildly up from your recent 22.
Mainly a completeness check while looking at gut, liver, and pancreatic possibilities together. Expected result: normal, as before.
Lower priority than ferritin or CBC, but useful to round out the liver picture. Expected result: normal, again arguing against a cholestatic explanation.
For you this is about whether atorvastatin 20 mg is enough in the setting of very high Lp(a). Expected result: HDL/triglycerides still good, LDL possibly still above the ideal very-high-risk target.
One of your most important heart-risk markers because it quantifies modifiable particle burden better than standard cholesterol numbers. Expected result: ideally still under 80 and hopefully not far from your prior 63.9.
Alcohol history, possible dysbiosis/malabsorption, fatigue, and bloating make it worth rechecking. Expected result: normal but possibly low-to-mid normal rather than robustly high.
You added this for a good reason because the severe upper-abdominal/epigastric pain episode with nausea and sweating cannot just be waved away. Expected result: normal, close to your earlier 35.3.
Cheaper and weaker than lipase, but it helps provide a fuller read on whether that pain episode had a pancreatic signature. Expected result: normal again.
Useful because eczema, inflammatory background, and supplementation gaps all matter here. Expected result: still acceptable but possibly lower than your prior 98.7 nmol/L.
Relevant because borderline hypothyroid drift can contribute to bloating, gut-motility slowdown, fatigue, and worse lipids. Expected result: upper-normal or borderline-high again.
Not central to today’s GI problem, but the upward trend makes it worth keeping honest. Expected result: still in range and hopefully near prior levels.
More of a rule-out than a likely hit, but persistent severe bloating and upper-GI discomfort make it reasonable. Expected result: normal.
Helpful because CRP can stay only mildly abnormal while a chronic inflammatory pattern is still present. Expected result: mildly elevated in the high teens or low 20s.
Important because ferritin can be distorted by inflammation while the real question is whether you are quietly running out of iron. Expected result: normal or edging upward.
Strong companion to ferritin and TIBC because it can reveal functional iron shortage. Expected result: probably lower than your older 40% reading, possibly teens to low 20s if depletion is advancing.
Not about solving symptoms; just useful information to finally have on file.
Relevant because alcohol can drain magnesium and the arm cramping/vibration symptom makes it worth checking. Expected result: normal or low-normal around your previous 0.82.
Useful because a cardiologist may want contrast imaging such as CCTA or angiography, and having a baseline kidney number removes friction. Expected result: normal again, around your previous 78 μmol/L baseline.
Relevant because heart-region discomfort, arm sensations, and any future ECG review are easier to interpret with sodium and potassium in hand. Expected result: normal sodium and potassium, consistent with prior results.
Useful for the cardiology visit because it gives a clean metabolic-risk baseline instead of a single glucose snapshot. Expected result: still reassuring, likely close to your previous 5.1%.