Individual tests

This test helps investigate problems related to bone metabolism or parathyroid function and possible vitamin D deficiency or malabsorption before commencing specific bone treatment and to monitor patients taking vitamin D.
Calcium is an essential mineral for forming and maintaining healthy teeth and bones. It helps your muscles send messages through the nervous system, and blood vessels contract, expand, and secrete hormones and enzymes. A long-term calcium deficiency can lead to dental changes, nerve malfunction, and brittle bones.
Chloride is an electrolyte that helps control the distribution of fluid and the pH balance in your body. Chloride is often measured with other electrolytes to diagnose or monitor conditions such as heart failure and kidney or liver disease.
Creatinine is a waste product your muscles produce as part of regular, everyday activities. Normally, your kidneys filter creatinine from your blood and send it out of the body in your urine. If there is a kidney problem, creatinine can build up in the blood, and less will be released in urine.
Creatinine is a waste product your muscles produce as part of everyday activities. Normally, your kidneys filter creatinine from your blood and send it out of the body in your urine. If there is a kidney problem, creatinine can build up in the blood, and less will be released in urine.
The creatinine clearance test helps assess how well the kidneys are working. This test compares creatinine levels in urine and blood.
Creatinine is a waste byproduct of normal muscle activity. The kidneys remove creatinine from the blood and it is then excreted through urine. A creatinine clearance test assesses how well the kidneys filter blood and is important for detecting and monitoring kidney problems.
Your kidneys have tiny filters called glomeruli which remove waste and excess fluid from blood. A glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is a blood test that checks how well your kidneys work by estimating how much blood passes through these filters each minute.
Electrolytes are minerals that help control the amount of fluids and the Ph balance in your body. An electrolyte panel includes: - Sodium, which helps control the body's fluids and ensures that nerves and muscles work properly. - Chloride, which also helps control the body's fluids and maintains healthy blood volume and blood pressure. - Potassium, which helps your heart and muscles work properly.
Folic acid is a form of vitamin B9. It helps the body make healthy new cells. For women who may get pregnant, it is really important. Getting enough folic acid before and during pregnancy can prevent birth defects in your baby's brain or spine.
Hepatitis A virus (HAV) is one of the most common causes of liver inflammation. When first infected with HAV, your immune system produces IgM antibodies, which appear in your blood 5 to 10 days before symptoms appear. They can stay in your blood for about six months after infection, with IgG antibodies remaining for life.
Hepatitis A virus is one of the most common causes of liver inflammation. Your immune system makes antibodies when you are first infected with HAV. IgM Antibodies often begin to appear in the blood 5 to 10 days before symptoms appear. They can stay in your blood for about six months after the infection. Some antibodies called IgG can last in your blood for life.
Hepatitis A is commonly spread by eating or drinking contaminated food or water. This may happen if an infected person doesn't wash their hands after using the bathroom. Most people recover from hepatitis A without lasting liver damage. This test detects the presence of HAV antibodies, which indicate prior or acute infection with, or immunization to, the hepatitis A virus.
The Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a common cause of liver inflammation. Your immune system makes IgM antibodies against HBV that appear in your blood several weeks after infection. People with the hepatitis B vaccine will not have this antibody in their blood. The test determines whether you are actively infected with the hepatitis B virus (HBV).
The quantitative test of hepatitis B core antibody level distinguishes cases of hepatitis antibodies from vaccination with those with a history of cured acute hepatitis B. This test can also be used with other hepatitis immunological indicators to evaluate treatment effectiveness in hepatitis B patients.
The hepatitis B virus (HBV) is one of the major causes of liver inflammation. The hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) appears after an HBV infection. Usually, HBeAg indicates much higher rates of viral replication and enhanced infectivity. However, variants of the hepatitis B virus do not produce the 'e' antigen, so this rule does not always hold. The HBeAg may be cleared, and antibodies to the 'e' antigen (anti-HBe) will arise immediately afterward, suggesting a dramatic decline in viral replication.
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