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Decode Biomarkers

Your blood work, in plain English.

Twenty-two biomarker explainers. What each one measures, what the ranges generally mean, and what to ask your healthcare provider — without the clinical jargon and without the wellness hype.

22 biomarkers explained Editorially reviewed Updated quarterly Sources cited

Heme doesn't diagnose. These guides explain what each marker is, what ranges generally mean, and what to discuss with your provider. They are not a substitute for personal medical advice.

Browse all 22 →

Iron & energy.

The biomarkers most often behind unexplained fatigue, hair shedding and exercise intolerance in women.

Thyroid panel.

The full panel — not just TSH. What your thyroid markers actually tell you, in plain English.

Hormones & cycle.

The reproductive panel that matters for cycle, fertility and perimenopause — and the timing rules that change interpretation.

Metabolic & inflammation.

The markers that flag long-term risk — blood sugar regulation, cardiovascular health and chronic inflammation.

Foundations

"In range" doesn't always mean optimal.

Reference ranges are calculated from broad population statistics, not from "at what level do women feel well." A growing body of clinical writing argues that functional deficiency — symptoms despite an "in range" number — can begin well above the lab cutoff, particularly in women who menstruate.

This is the conversation worth having with your provider: not just "is my number in range" but "is my number consistent with how I'm feeling, and is it where you would want it for someone in my situation?"

See how this plays out with ferritin — the women's health marker most often dismissed as fine →

Educational only. Not medical advice. Biomarker explainers on Heme are general education, reviewed for accuracy by qualified clinicians. Always speak with a qualified healthcare provider about symptoms, lab results or treatment decisions — particularly if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, take medication, or have an existing medical condition.