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44 cutting-edge diagnostic modalities. Take any test, anywhere. Gabriel sees what they missed.
Every diagnostic is scored by our Trust Score algorithm combining clinical validation and real-world patient outcomes.
Advanced energy and biofield testing you won't find anywhere else

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Showing 40 diagnostics

A comprehensive full-body MRI scan that screens for over 500 conditions including early-stage cancers, aneurysms, organ abnormalities, and spinal issues — all without a single dose of radiation.
What to expect: The scan takes approximately 60 minutes.

Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DEXA) combined with Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR) testing gives you the most precise picture of your body composition and metabolic function available anywhere.
What to expect: The DEXA scan takes about 10 minutes — you lie on an open table while a scanning arm passes over you.

A small wearable sensor placed on your arm continuously tracks your blood glucose levels 24/7, revealing how your body uniquely responds to food, exercise, sleep, and stress in real-time.
What to expect: You'll receive a small sensor (about the size of a quarter) that adheres to the back of your upper arm.

The Dried Urine Test for Comprehensive Hormones (DUTCH) is the most advanced hormone test available, mapping your complete hormonal landscape including cortisol patterns, sex hormones, their metabolites, and melatonin — all from dried urine samples collected at home.
What to expect: You'll collect dried urine samples on filter paper at four specific times throughout one day (and one first-morning void the next day).

The GI-MAP (Gastrointestinal Microbial Assay Plus) uses quantitative PCR technology to detect parasites, bacteria, fungi, and viruses in your gut with unmatched precision — plus critical markers for inflammation, immune function, and intestinal permeability.
What to expect: You'll collect a small stool sample at home using the provided kit — it takes about 5 minutes.

Medical thermography (Digital Infrared Thermal Imaging — DITI) uses ultra-sensitive infrared cameras to detect heat patterns on the surface of your body, revealing areas of inflammation, vascular changes, and abnormal metabolic activity — all without radiation, compression, or contact.
What to expect: You'll stand in a temperature-controlled room while an infrared camera takes images of the relevant body regions.

The Organic Acids Test (OAT) from Mosaic Diagnostics is one of the most comprehensive metabolic snapshots available, measuring 76 organic acid markers in urine that reflect mitochondrial function, neurotransmitter metabolism, nutrient status, oxidative stress, and microbial overgrowth.
What to expect: Collect a first-morning urine sample at home using the provided kit.

Hair Tissue Mineral Analysis (HTMA) measures mineral content and ratios in a small hair sample, providing a 3-month retrospective window into your cellular mineral status, adrenal function, metabolic rate, and heavy metal accumulation.
What to expect: You'll cut a small sample of hair from the back of your head (closest to the scalp) using the provided instructions.

Advanced lipid testing goes far beyond standard cholesterol panels, measuring LDL particle number (LDL-P), particle size, Lp(a), ApoB, and inflammatory markers — the metrics that actually predict cardiovascular risk.
What to expect: A standard blood draw at a local lab, fasting for 10–12 hours before the test.

Amino acid testing measures the levels of all 20+ amino acids in blood or urine, revealing protein metabolism deficiencies, methylation blocks, neurotransmitter precursor status, and mitochondrial dysfunction markers.
What to expect: A fasting blood draw or first-morning urine sample.

Oxidative stress testing measures markers of free radical damage (lipid peroxides, DNA damage, protein oxidation) and your body's antioxidant defense capacity (glutathione, SOD, catalase) — revealing the balance between cellular damage and repair.
What to expect: A blood or urine sample depending on the specific markers tested.

Advanced cardiovascular risk testing goes beyond cholesterol to measure inflammatory markers (hsCRP, Lp-PLA2, MPO), clotting factors (fibrinogen, homocysteine), and vascular health markers (ADMA, TMAO) that drive atherosclerosis and thrombosis.
What to expect: A fasting blood draw at a local lab.

Methylation panel testing measures key markers in the methylation cycle — homocysteine, SAMe, SAH, methylmalonic acid, and B-vitamin cofactors — revealing how efficiently your body is performing this critical biochemical process that affects detoxification, neurotransmitter production, DNA repair, and gene expression.
What to expect: A fasting blood draw at a local lab or specialty lab.

A comprehensive inflammatory markers panel measures multiple cytokines, inflammatory mediators, and immune activation markers including IL-6, TNF-alpha, IL-1β, hsCRP, ESR, and ferritin — providing a complete picture of systemic inflammation.
What to expect: A fasting blood draw at a local lab.

A Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP) is a standard blood test that measures kidney function, liver function, electrolyte balance, and blood sugar — providing essential baseline data on your core metabolic health.
What to expect: A fasting blood draw at any local lab.

Dried blood spot (DBS) testing uses a simple finger prick to collect blood onto filter paper, which is then mailed to a lab for analysis. DBS enables at-home testing for omega-3 fatty acids, fat-soluble vitamins, thyroid hormones, and more — no phlebotomy required.
What to expect: A simple at-home finger prick using a lancet.

A comprehensive omega fatty acid panel measures the complete fatty acid composition of your red blood cell membranes, including omega-3s (EPA, DHA, ALA), omega-6s (arachidonic acid, linoleic acid), trans fats, saturated fats, and monounsaturated fats.
What to expect: A blood draw at a local lab or at-home finger prick dried blood spot kit.

Urine-based neurotransmitter testing measures the levels of key brain chemicals including serotonin, dopamine, GABA, glutamate, norepinephrine, and epinephrine — providing a biochemical snapshot of your neurological function.
What to expect: Collect a second-morning urine sample at home using the provided kit.

A comprehensive hormone panel goes far beyond standard estradiol and testosterone testing, measuring total and free hormones, SHBG, DHT, androstenedione, pregnenolone, and progesterone — painting a complete picture of your hormonal cascade.
What to expect: A blood draw at a local lab or at-home finger prick kit.

Four-point salivary cortisol testing measures your cortisol levels at four specific times throughout one day (morning, noon, afternoon, evening), revealing your complete diurnal cortisol rhythm — the single most important adrenal function marker.
What to expect: Collect saliva samples at home at four specific times during one day — you simply spit into collection tubes.

A comprehensive thyroid panel measures TSH, free T4, free T3, reverse T3, thyroid antibodies (TPO and TG), and thyroglobulin — providing a complete picture of thyroid production, conversion, autoimmunity, and cellular resistance.
What to expect: A standard blood draw at a local lab, ideally done in the morning before 10 AM (TSH is highest in the morning).

The Adrenal Stress Index (ASI) combines 4-point cortisol rhythm testing with DHEA, insulin, and secretory IgA to provide a complete picture of your hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function, metabolic health, and immune resilience.
What to expect: Collect saliva samples at home at four times throughout one day, plus a fasting insulin challenge (optional with some panels).

Comprehensive men's hormone testing goes far beyond basic testosterone, measuring total and free testosterone, SHBG, DHT, estradiol (yes, men need estrogen too), PSA, prolactin, LH/FSH (pituitary function), DHEA-S, plus metabolic markers like fasting insulin and HbA1c that directly impact testosterone production.
What to expect: A fasting morning blood draw (testosterone is highest 7-9 AM).

Women's hormone testing requires precision timing and comprehensive markers: AMH (anti-Mullerian hormone, the fertility crystal ball revealing ovarian reserve), FSH, LH, estradiol, progesterone (must be tested luteal phase, day 19-21 of cycle), prolactin, DHEA-S, testosterone (yes, women need this too), complete thyroid panel (thyroid dysfunction is a top cause of infertility), ferritin (iron deficiency sabotages fertility), and fasting insulin (the PCOS connection).
What to expect: Timing matters.

IgG and IgA food sensitivity panels test your immune system's response to 96–200+ foods, identifying delayed-reaction food sensitivities that are impossible to detect through elimination diets alone.
What to expect: A simple blood draw (finger prick kits available for some panels).

A comprehensive stool analysis combines culture-based methods with biochemical markers to assess digestion, absorption, inflammation, immune function, and the balance of beneficial and pathogenic organisms in your gut.
What to expect: Collect a stool sample at home using the provided kit — simple, quick, and sanitary.

The Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO) breath test measures hydrogen and methane gas production after ingesting a lactulose or glucose solution, revealing bacterial overgrowth in your small intestine — a condition that drives bloating, gas, diarrhea, and malabsorption.
What to expect: You'll fast overnight, then drink a lactulose or glucose solution and breathe into collection tubes every 15–20 minutes for 3 hours.

Shotgun metagenomic sequencing analyzes all the DNA in your stool sample — not just bacteria, but fungi, viruses, archaea, and parasites — providing species-level identification and functional pathway analysis of your gut microbiome.
What to expect: Collect a stool sample at home using the provided kit.

Epigenetic clock testing analyzes DNA methylation patterns across your genome to calculate your biological age — how old your cells actually are, regardless of your chronological birthday.
What to expect: A simple blood draw or saliva collection kit mailed to your home.

Clinical-grade genomic testing goes far beyond consumer DNA kits like 23andMe, analyzing specific gene variants (SNPs) that affect detoxification, methylation, inflammation, nutrient metabolism, and hormonal pathways.
What to expect: A simple saliva collection kit mailed to your home.

Telomere length testing measures the protective caps at the ends of your chromosomes that shorten with each cell division. Telomere length is one of the strongest biomarkers of biological aging and a predictor of age-related disease risk.
What to expect: A simple blood draw at a lab or at-home dried blood spot kit.

Nutrigenomics testing analyzes gene variants that affect how your body processes nutrients, including vitamin metabolism (MTHFR, VDR, BCMO1), caffeine sensitivity (CYP1A2), gluten intolerance (HLA-DQ2/DQ8), lactose intolerance (LCT), and omega-3 needs (FADS1/FADS2).
What to expect: A simple saliva or cheek swab kit mailed to your home.

Organ-specific biological age testing uses blood protein analysis (proteomics) to measure how old each of your organs actually is, independent of your chronological age. Based on research from Stanford University (Dr. Tony Wyss-Coray), this test analyzes approximately 5,000 plasma proteins to generate aging scores for individual organs.
What to expect: A simple blood draw collected at home or in a lab.

Comprehensive environmental toxin testing combines mycotoxin panels, GPL-TOX (toxic organic chemicals), and heavy metal testing to reveal the invisible toxic burden that may be driving your chronic symptoms.
What to expect: Mycotoxin and GPL-TOX panels require a first-morning urine sample.

Heavy metals testing measures your body's burden of toxic metals like mercury, lead, cadmium, arsenic, and aluminum — silent poisons that accumulate over decades and drive neurodegeneration, fatigue, hormonal disruption, and immune dysfunction.
What to expect: For provoked testing, you'll take a chelating agent (DMSA capsules) and collect urine for 6 hours.

Mycotoxin testing measures the toxic byproducts of mold species in your urine, revealing exposure to dangerous mold toxins like ochratoxin A, aflatoxins, trichothecenes, and gliotoxin that accumulate from water-damaged buildings.
What to expect: Collect a first-morning urine sample at home using the provided kit.

Environmental toxin screening tests for exposure to pesticides, herbicides, plasticizers (phthalates, BPA), solvents, and other petrochemical toxins that accumulate from everyday exposures to food, water, personal care products, and the built environment.
What to expect: Collect a first-morning urine sample at home using the provided kit.

VO2 max testing measures your maximum oxygen consumption during exercise — the single strongest predictor of all-cause mortality and the gold standard for cardiovascular fitness assessment.
What to expect: You'll exercise on a treadmill or bike while wearing a mask that measures your oxygen consumption and CO2 output.

Comprehensive Lyme disease testing uses advanced methods like Western blot IgG and IgM, C6 peptide, CD57, and co-infection panels to detect Borrelia burgdorferi and related tick-borne infections that standard ELISA screening completely misses.
What to expect: A blood draw at a specialty lab or using an at-home kit.

Comprehensive iron testing measures serum iron, ferritin (iron storage), TIBC (total iron binding capacity), transferrin saturation, reticulocyte count, and soluble transferrin receptor to reveal the complete picture of your iron status, absorption capacity, and red blood cell production.
What to expect: A fasting blood draw at a local lab, ideally in the morning (iron levels are highest in the morning).
Upload results from any lab, MRI, or genetic panel. Gabriel interprets through a naturopathic lens, connecting findings across all your data.
Not sure which test is right? Ask Gabriel