Huemn baseline Panel in houston

A physician-guided panel that provides the clarity needed to create personalized wellness, longevity, and performance plans.

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What is the Huemn baseline Panel?

Huemn’s Baseline Panel removes the guesswork around health optimization, allowing you to familiarize yourself with your unique physiology. One blood draw measures ~60 biomarkers across hormones, thyroid, cardiometabolic risk, inflammation, growth/repair, and immune readiness. We translate results into a Dashboard of Health of the systems that drive energy, sleep, body composition, immunity, and recovery. To give you the best insight, the findings are grouped under 3 categories: Optimal, Borderline, and Needs Attention. We don’t “numbers dump;” we help you synthesize what matters and build a solid foundation to becoming your best self.

You get:

  • An analysis of ~60 biomarkers

  • A personalized Huemn Optimization Health Dashboard

  • A discounted 45-minute bloodwork review with a Huemn Provider

  • A targeted plan customized to your specific goal

    $299

Female Baseline Blood Panel (623X)

This is a well-rounded, high-value panel that goes beyond basic labs by integrating metabolic, thyroid, inflammatory, and female hormone markers—giving a complete snapshot of a woman’s health and hormonal balance in one test.

Markers:

  • Measures red blood cells, white blood cells, hemoglobin, and platelets.
    For women: Helps detect anemia (common due to menstruation), infections, and immune issues. Low iron-related anemia is especially important to monitor.

  • Assesses liver function, kidney function, electrolytes, and blood glucose.
    For women: Important for detecting metabolic health issues, hydration status, and early signs of conditions like insulin resistance or liver stress.

  • Marker of inflammation in the body.
    For women: Elevated levels are linked to higher cardiovascular risk and can also reflect chronic inflammation tied to hormonal imbalance or autoimmune conditions (more common in women).

  • Average blood sugar over ~3 months.
    For women: Screens for prediabetes/diabetes; also relevant for conditions like PCOS, where insulin resistance is common.

  • Measures cholesterol (LDL, HDL, triglycerides).
    For women: Cardiovascular risk shifts after menopause—estrogen decline can worsen cholesterol levels. HDL (“good cholesterol”) is typically higher in premenopausal women.

  • Controls thyroid activity.
    For women: Thyroid disorders (like hypothyroidism) are significantly more common in women and can affect weight, mood, hair, fertility, and menstrual cycles.

  • Measures vitamin D levels.
    For women: Crucial for bone health (osteoporosis risk increases with age), immune function, and hormone balance. Deficiency is very common.

  • An adrenal hormone and precursor to sex hormones.
    For women: Helps evaluate adrenal function and androgen levels. Imbalances may relate to PCOS, fatigue, or low libido.

  • Active thyroid hormone.
    For women: Reflects how well thyroid hormone is being utilized—important when symptoms persist despite normal TSH.

  • Primary thyroid hormone produced.
    For women: Helps assess thyroid production; combined with T3/TSH gives a full thyroid picture—important for metabolism and reproductive health.

  • Measures both bound and active testosterone.
    For women: Small amounts are essential for energy, libido, and muscle tone. High levels may indicate PCOS; low levels may affect mood and vitality.

  • Key reproductive hormone.
    For women: Regulates menstrual cycle and supports pregnancy. Low levels can cause irregular cycles, PMS, or fertility issues.

  • Primary form of estrogen.
    For women: Central to reproductive health, bone density, mood, and cardiovascular protection. Levels fluctuate across the menstrual cycle and decline after menopause.

Male Baseline Blood Panel (622X)

This panel is a comprehensive baseline health assessment for men, designed to evaluate core body systems, metabolic health, and male-specific hormones in a single, streamlined test.

Markers:

  • Measures red blood cells, white blood cells, hemoglobin, and platelets.
    For men: Helps detect infections, inflammation, and blood disorders. Men typically have higher hemoglobin than women; elevated levels can sometimes relate to dehydration, smoking, or testosterone use.

  • Assesses liver function, kidney function, electrolytes, and blood glucose.
    For men: Important for monitoring liver stress (e.g., alcohol, medications), kidney health, and metabolic conditions like prediabetes.

  • Marker of systemic inflammation.
    For men: Elevated levels are strongly linked to cardiovascular risk—men tend to develop heart disease earlier than women, making this a key marker.

  • Average blood sugar over ~3 months.
    For men: Screens for prediabetes/diabetes; men often develop metabolic syndrome earlier, especially with abdominal fat.

  • Measures cholesterol (LDL, HDL, triglycerides).
    For men: Critical for heart disease risk—men generally have lower HDL (“good cholesterol”) and higher cardiovascular risk at younger ages.

  • Regulates thyroid activity.
    For men: Thyroid disorders are less common than in women but still affect energy, weight, mood, and testosterone levels.

  • Measures vitamin D levels.
    For men: Supports bone density, immune function, and testosterone production. Low levels are linked to fatigue and reduced muscle function.

  • Adrenal hormone and precursor to testosterone.
    For men: Reflects adrenal health and androgen production; low levels may be associated with aging, fatigue, or reduced vitality.

  • Active thyroid hormone.
    For men: Indicates how effectively thyroid hormone is being used—important for metabolism, energy, and body composition.

  • Primary thyroid hormone produced by the thyroid.
    For men: Helps evaluate thyroid output; imbalances can affect metabolism, mood, and hormonal health.

  • Measures total and biologically active testosterone.
    For men: Central to male health—affects muscle mass, libido, energy, mood, and cognitive function. Low levels are common with aging or stress.

  • Primary form of estrogen.
    For men: Needed in small amounts for bone health and libido. High levels (often due to excess body fat or testosterone conversion) can cause low libido, fatigue, or gynecomastia.

  • Protein produced by the prostate gland.
    For men: Used to screen for prostate enlargement, inflammation, or prostate cancer risk—especially important as men age (typically 40–50+).

How the dashboard turns into results

  1. Test: The first step is one fasted blood draw, which typically lasts between 10–15 minutes. There may be minor side effects such as bruising or soreness that should resolve on their own.

  2. Translate: Once your test results are in, Huemn Provider converts them into an easy-to-understand dashboard that lays the groundwork for the next step.

  3. Plan: Huemn Provider builds your personal protocol consisting of targeted supplements, nutrition, and an emphasis on exercise. If necessary, we will implement hormone optimization or other medical treatments. You will also receive recommendations on at least one of Huemn’s modalities or services, including:

  4. Track: Any changes will be monitored closely as you progress through your treatment. We give you the option to retest and adjust your plan depending on improvements.

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  • Yes. We recommend refraining from eating, smoking, or drinking alcohol 8–12 hours before your scheduled blood draw. You may drink water. Morning draws are ideal.

  • Each draw takes around 10 to 15 minutes. Do not do any strenuous physical activity for the next 4-5 hours. Your results will be ready within 2-3 days.

  • After your bloodwork results are received, Huemn Provider reviews them with you and forms a step-by-step plan that puts your health goals within reach. This may include peptide treatments, nutrition recommendations, or any of our state-of-the-art modalities.

  • Absolutely. Your panel provides a baseline or checkpoint that allows us to optimize dosing and priorities. Your provider will monitor your progress closely and adjust your dosages appropriately.

  • Yes, all biomarker testing methods are available at our MKT (Heights) location and our Vintage Park (North Houston) location. We would love to have you! Call us to schedule or book online.

FAQs

Disclaimer: The statements and content presented on this website have not been evaluated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). We do not diagnose, treat, or claim to treat any health conditions. All services provided by Huemn are intended solely to promote overall wellness, and information on this site is published for educational purposes. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making any decisions related to your health.