Sample results
Cadmium poisoning occurs when toxic levels of cadmium, a heavy metal, accumulate in the body. It is caused by exposure to industrial processes, contaminated foods, cigarette smoke, and polluted environments where cadmium enters the bloodstream and damages organs. The Cadmium Blood Test is the most important test for diagnosis because it directly measures cadmium levels in the bloodstream and detects recent exposure.
Cadmium poisoning is caused by exposure to cadmium, a toxic heavy metal found in industrial workplaces, contaminated foods, cigarette smoke, and polluted air or water. Workers in battery manufacturing, metal plating, pigment production, and plastic manufacturing face the highest occupational exposure risks. Environmental sources include shellfish and organ meats from animals exposed to contaminated feed, rice grown in cadmium-contaminated soil, and secondhand cigarette smoke. Even one cigarette contains enough cadmium to contribute to long-term accumulation in the body, making smoking and living with smokers significant risk factors.
The Cadmium Blood Test is the most important test for cadmium poisoning because it directly measures current cadmium levels in your bloodstream and detects recent exposure within the past few months. This test shows elevated results when acute poisoning occurs and helps confirm diagnosis alongside symptoms like nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and anemia. For a more comprehensive evaluation, the Heavy Metals Panel Random Urine test is essential because it detects both recent and chronic cadmium exposure by measuring how much cadmium your kidneys are excreting, which indicates long-term body burden. Urine testing is particularly valuable for identifying chronic toxicity that can lead to kidney damage, bone disease, and lung problems even before severe symptoms appear.
You should get tested if you work in industries involving batteries, metal plating, pigments, or plastics, especially if you experience unexplained stomach pain, nausea, or vomiting. Testing is important if you are a smoker or live with smokers and notice symptoms like persistent fatigue, bone pain, or frequent fractures. You should also get tested if you regularly consume shellfish or organ meats and develop kidney problems, anemia, or yellowing of the skin. Anyone with unexplained respiratory symptoms, loss of smell, or osteoporosis with known cadmium exposure should be tested immediately, as early detection prevents irreversible organ damage.
What this means
Your testosterone levels are slightly below the optimal range. While this is not necessarily cause for concern, it may contribute to occasional fatigue, reduced motivation, or lower muscle mass over time.
Recommended actions
Increase resistance or strength training
Prioritize 7–8 hours of quality sleep per night, try to reduce stress
Include more zinc- and magnesium-rich foods (like shellfish, beef, pumpkin seeds, spinach)
Consider retesting in 3–6 months
Not overhyped or overpriced. Just comprehensive blood testing made simple and for everyone.
Sample results
Your 24/7 Personal Lab Guide
Quick questions: