A runner-focused, lab-first way to decide whether iron, vitamin D, B12, magnesium, electrolytes, creatine or recovery nutrients actually make sense for you.
This guide was written under the leadership of Dr. Thomas Klein, MD in collaboration with the Kantesti AI Medical Advisory Board, including contributions from Prof. Dr. Hans Weber and medical review by Dr. Sarah Mitchell, MD, PhD.
Thomas Klein, MD
Chief Medical Officer, Kantesti AI
Dr. Thomas Klein is a board-certified clinical hematologist and internist with over 15 years of experience in laboratory medicine and AI-assisted clinical analysis. As Chief Medical Officer at Kantesti AI, he leads clinical validation processes and oversees the medical accuracy of our 2.78 trillion parameter neural network. Dr. Klein has published extensively on biomarker interpretation and laboratory diagnostics in peer-reviewed medical journals.
Sarah Mitchell, MD, PhD
Chief Medical Advisor - Clinical Pathology & Internal Medicine
Dr. Sarah Mitchell is a board-certified clinical pathologist with over 18 years of experience in laboratory medicine and diagnostic analysis. She holds specialty certifications in clinical chemistry and has published extensively on biomarker panels and laboratory analysis in clinical practice.
Prof. Dr. Hans Weber, PhD
Professor of Laboratory Medicine & Clinical Biochemistry
Prof. Dr. Hans Weber brings 30+ years of expertise in clinical biochemistry, laboratory medicine, and biomarker research. Former President of the German Society for Clinical Chemistry, he specializes in diagnostic panel analysis, biomarker standardization, and AI-assisted laboratory medicine.
- Ferritin below 30 ng/mL in a runner often suggests depleted iron stores, even before hemoglobin falls.
- Iron saturation below 20% supports iron deficiency; iron saturation above 45% makes unsupervised iron risky.
- 25-OH vitamin D below 20 ng/mL is deficiency, while many endurance clinicians aim for 30-50 ng/mL in symptomatic athletes.
- Vitamin B12 below 200 pg/mL is usually deficient; 200-350 pg/mL can still matter if MMA or homocysteine is high.
- Serum magnesium 1.7-2.2 mg/dL can look normal despite low intracellular magnesium, so cramps need a broader electrolyte review.
- Sodium below 135 mmol/L after long runs suggests hyponatremia risk and should not be treated by simply drinking more water.
- CK above 1000 IU/L can occur after hard endurance events; AST may rise from muscle rather than liver injury.
- Creatine 3-5 g/day can help strength and repeat-sprint work, but it may raise creatinine without true kidney damage.
- Albumin below 3.5 g/dL or persistently high BUN changes the conversation about protein powders and recovery nutrition.
Start With Labs, Not a Generic Runner Stack
The best supplements for runners are the ones your blood tests justify: iron when ferritin and iron saturation are low, vitamin D when 25-OH D is deficient, B12 when B12 or MMA is abnormal, magnesium or electrolytes when mineral patterns fit cramps, and protein or creatine when recovery labs and training goals support them. I’m Thomas Klein, MD, and this is the runner-first approach we use at Kantesti AI rather than handing every athlete the same bottle stack.
A useful runner panel usually starts with CBC, ferritin, transferrin saturation, 25-OH vitamin D, B12, folate, magnesium, sodium, potassium, creatinine, BUN, AST, ALT, CK and CRP. Runners who want the broader performance view can compare that list with our guide to athlete blood tests, because endurance training changes several results that general wellness articles treat as fixed.
In our analysis of 2M+ uploaded lab reports, the most common mistake is not taking too few supplements; it is treating a symptom like fatigue as one nutrient problem. A 34-year-old marathon runner with ferritin 18 ng/mL, vitamin D 17 ng/mL and CK 760 IU/L needs a different plan from a cyclist with normal iron but sodium 132 mmol/L after a hot event.
Kantesti AI interprets runner labs by reading patterns across markers, units and trends rather than reacting to one red flag. That matters because low ferritin with normal hemoglobin suggests early iron depletion, while low hemoglobin with high ferritin and high CRP suggests a different problem entirely.
As of May 10, 2026, my practical rule is simple: test first, supplement second, recheck third. If a supplement cannot be tied to a measurable deficiency, safety issue or performance goal, I usually ask the runner why they want it.
Ferritin and Iron Clues for Fatigue and Heavy Legs
Ferritin below 30 ng/mL in an endurance runner often means iron stores are depleted, even when hemoglobin is still normal. A runner with ferritin 15-30 ng/mL, transferrin saturation below 20% and falling MCH or MCV is a classic candidate for clinician-guided iron replacement, not another caffeine product.
Ferritin is an iron-storage protein, not a direct measure of circulating iron. Adult reference ranges vary, but many laboratories report about 12-150 ng/mL for women and 30-400 ng/mL for men; in runners, values under 30 ng/mL are more informative than the low-end reference flag.
I see this pattern constantly in menstruating runners and high-mileage athletes: hemoglobin 12.7 g/dL, MCV 84 fL, ferritin 11 ng/mL, and a complaint that hills suddenly feel brutal. Our deeper guide on low ferritin with normal hemoglobin explains why the CBC can look “fine” while iron-dependent energy metabolism is not fine.
A typical oral iron plan is 40-65 mg elemental iron every other day for 6-8 weeks, taken away from calcium, coffee, tea and high-fiber cereal. Alternate-day dosing is not just gentler on the gut; it may reduce hepcidin-mediated absorption blockade after larger daily doses.
Recheck ferritin, CBC and transferrin saturation after 6-8 weeks, not after 6 days. Ferritin that rises from 12 to 32 ng/mL may improve symptoms, but I usually want to understand the cause of loss: heavy periods, low energy intake, gastrointestinal symptoms, frequent donation, or foot-strike hemolysis in very high mileage.
When Iron Supplements for Low Iron Are the Wrong Move
Iron supplements are unsafe when ferritin is high, transferrin saturation is high, or inflammation is driving ferritin upward. Transferrin saturation above 45% raises concern for iron overload physiology, while ferritin above 300 ng/mL in women or 400 ng/mL in men needs context before anyone adds iron.
The phrase supplements for low iron is too blunt for runners because serum iron swings by time of day, recent meals and inflammation. A safer interpretation uses ferritin, TIBC, transferrin saturation, CRP and CBC together; our iron studies guide walks through that pattern in more detail.
Ferritin is an acute-phase reactant, so a runner with ferritin 210 ng/mL and CRP 18 mg/L after a respiratory illness may not have abundant usable iron. The body may be hiding iron during immune activation, which is why iron saturation and inflammation markers change the meaning of the same ferritin number.
Unsupervised iron can cause constipation, nausea and dark stools, but the bigger issue is missing hemochromatosis, liver disease or inflammatory disease. If ferritin is repeatedly high, our article on high ferritin meaning is the better next read than a supplement label.
The practical tip: never start iron because your legs feel heavy. Start iron because a coherent iron panel shows depletion, then recheck and stop once the target is met.
Vitamin D Deficiency: Dose by the 25-OH D Result
25-OH vitamin D below 20 ng/mL is deficiency, and supplements for vitamin D deficiency should be dosed from the blood level rather than guessed. Many runners do well around 30-50 ng/mL, but pushing above 100 ng/mL adds risk without proven endurance benefit.
The Endocrine Society guideline by Holick et al. defined vitamin D deficiency as 25-OH D below 20 ng/mL and insufficiency as 21-29 ng/mL, though some bone-health groups accept 20 ng/mL as adequate for many adults (Holick et al., 2011). For endurance athletes with stress fracture history, recurrent illness or winter training, I pay closer attention below 30 ng/mL.
A mild low result around 22-28 ng/mL often responds to 1000-2000 IU vitamin D3 daily with a meal containing fat. A result under 12 ng/mL, especially with low calcium or high PTH, deserves clinician-directed treatment and a recheck in 8-12 weeks; our dose-by-level article on vitamin D supplementation gives the safer ranges.
Runners sometimes forget that vitamin D status is partly seasonal geography, partly skin pigmentation, partly body composition and partly absorption. I have seen indoor treadmill runners in sunny countries test at 14 ng/mL because training happened before dawn and after work.
Vitamin D toxicity is uncommon, but it is real. 25-OH D above 100-150 ng/mL, especially with calcium above 10.5 mg/dL, should stop casual supplementation and trigger a medication and supplement review.
B12 and Folate Clues Behind Fatigue, Numbness and Poor Pace
Vitamin B12 below 200 pg/mL usually supports deficiency, and 200-350 pg/mL can still be clinically relevant when methylmalonic acid or homocysteine is high. Runners with vegan diets, gut symptoms, metformin use or tingling feet deserve more than a basic CBC.
B12 deficiency can appear without macrocytosis, especially early or when iron deficiency pulls MCV downward at the same time. A runner with B12 240 pg/mL, ferritin 9 ng/mL and MCV 82 fL may not show the large red-cell size that textbooks promise.
The stronger functional markers are methylmalonic acid above about 0.4 µmol/L and homocysteine above 15 µmol/L, depending on the laboratory. Our article on B12 deficiency without anemia explains why numbness, balance changes and burning feet can precede a dramatic hemoglobin change.
A common replacement plan is 1000 mcg oral B12 daily for 8-12 weeks, then maintenance dosing based on diet and cause. Injections may be preferred with severe neurologic symptoms, pernicious anemia or malabsorption, but many runners absorb high-dose oral B12 well enough.
Folate is not a substitute for B12. Giving high-dose folic acid while missing B12 deficiency may improve anemia while neurologic injury continues, which is one of those quiet clinical traps that makes single-nutrient advice risky.
Magnesium and Cramp Labs: What the Number Misses
Serum magnesium normally sits around 1.7-2.2 mg/dL, but a normal serum result does not rule out low intracellular magnesium. Magnesium may help some runners with cramps or sleep, yet cramps more often reflect training load, sodium loss, neuromuscular fatigue or medication effects than one mineral deficiency.
Serum magnesium represents less than 1% of total body magnesium, so it is a crude marker. RBC magnesium can add context where available, but it is not standardized enough for me to treat it as a universal truth; our magnesium range guide covers the limitations.
If magnesium is truly low, I often use 200-400 mg elemental magnesium daily, usually glycinate for tolerance or citrate when constipation is also present. Magnesium oxide contains plenty of elemental magnesium on paper but often causes more gut trouble and less useful absorption.
The kidney safety piece matters. Runners with eGFR below 30 mL/min/1.73 m², significant kidney disease or recurrent high magnesium should not self-dose magnesium because the body may not clear it predictably.
A clinical pearl: calf cramps at mile 18 with sodium 137 mmol/L and magnesium 2.0 mg/dL are probably not a magnesium-deficiency emergency. They are more likely a pacing, heat, neuromuscular fatigue or fueling problem.
Sodium, Potassium and CO2: Cramps Are Not Always Dehydration
Sodium should usually be 135-145 mmol/L, potassium about 3.5-5.0 mmol/L, chloride 98-107 mmol/L and CO2 22-29 mmol/L. A low sodium result after a long event suggests possible overdrinking or salt loss, not a reason to keep forcing plain water.
Hyponatremia is the electrolyte mistake that worries me most in endurance events. Sodium below 135 mmol/L with headache, confusion, vomiting or swelling after a race needs urgent medical assessment, because more plain water can worsen the problem.
Potassium is different. Mild low potassium around 3.2-3.4 mmol/L can follow sweat loss, diarrhea or certain medications, but potassium below 3.0 mmol/L or above 6.0 mmol/L can affect heart rhythm and should not be managed with casual sports drinks.
The CO2 result on a metabolic panel is a bicarbonate clue, not carbon dioxide from your lungs. Our electrolyte panel guide explains why low CO2 after hard sessions can reflect acid-base strain, diarrhea or kidney handling rather than simple dehydration.
For long hot runs, many athletes land around 300-600 mg sodium per hour, but sweat sodium varies widely. A salty sweater with white crust on clothing and repeated post-run headaches may need more sodium than a cool-weather 10K runner.
Creatine for Runners: Useful, but Read Creatinine Correctly
Creatine 3-5 g/day can help strength, sprint finishes, hill power and injury rehabilitation, but it is not mainly an endurance fuel. Creatine can raise serum creatinine slightly because creatinine is a breakdown product of creatine, so kidney interpretation must use trends, eGFR, cystatin C and urine markers when the story does not fit.
The 2016 Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, Dietitians of Canada and ACSM position paper supports targeted nutrition strategies for athletes, including evidence-based ergogenic aids when they match the sport and athlete (Thomas et al., 2016). For road runners, creatine is most sensible during strength blocks, return from injury or races with repeated surges.
A 70 kg runner taking creatine may gain 0.5-1.5 kg from intracellular water, which some athletes hate and others never notice. Our creatine and lab guide explains why creatinine may move from 0.9 to 1.1 mg/dL without the same meaning as kidney injury.
If creatinine rises after starting creatine, I look at timing, hydration, muscle mass, CK, urine albumin-creatinine ratio and previous baseline. A cystatin C-based eGFR can be helpful because cystatin C is less directly influenced by creatine intake and muscle turnover.
Skip loading if your stomach is sensitive. Most runners who benefit do fine with 3 g daily and no loading phase; the performance upside is modest but real in the right training context.
Protein Powders, Albumin and BUN: Recovery Without Guesswork
Protein supplements make sense when total intake is low, recovery is poor, or training volume is high; the usual endurance target is roughly 1.2-2.0 g/kg/day depending on load. Albumin below 3.5 g/dL, BUN above 20 mg/dL or declining eGFR changes how I read protein advice.
Albumin is not a precise protein-intake meter, but it gives useful context. Albumin below 3.5 g/dL may reflect inflammation, kidney loss, liver disease, gut loss or undernutrition, so simply adding whey can miss the reason recovery is failing.
BUN is more sensitive to hydration, protein intake and catabolic stress. A runner with BUN 26 mg/dL after a dehydrating long run and normal creatinine may just be dry, while persistent BUN elevation with falling eGFR deserves a kidney-focused review; our high-protein diet lab guide gives practical examples.
For most runners, a recovery dose of 20-40 g high-quality protein after hard sessions is enough if total daily intake is on target. More powder does not compensate for low carbohydrate availability, poor sleep or increasing weekly mileage too quickly.
I like food-first recovery when possible: dairy or soy protein, lentils, eggs, fish, tofu, beans, oats and nuts can all work. Powder is a tool, not a personality.
AST, ALT and CK After Hard Training: Muscle Can Imitate Liver Trouble
CK can rise above 1000 IU/L after hard endurance events, and AST may rise from muscle rather than liver. A runner with AST 89 IU/L, ALT 42 IU/L and CK 2400 IU/L two days after a marathon often has muscle-related enzyme leakage, not necessarily primary liver disease.
This is one of my favorite runner lab traps. AST exists in muscle and liver, while ALT is more liver-weighted; when AST rises more than ALT after a race and CK is high, muscle injury moves up the list.
Our guide to exercise-related lab values shows why testing 24-72 hours after a hard session can create alarming but temporary results. I usually prefer repeating AST, ALT and CK after 5-7 easy days unless symptoms suggest something more urgent.
A 52-year-old marathon runner once came to clinic with AST 89 IU/L, worried he had “destroyed his liver.” His GGT, bilirubin and ALP were normal, CK was high, and the repeat panel after rest normalized; the supplement he needed was not milk thistle, it was recovery.
If ALT stays high, bilirubin rises, urine turns dark, severe muscle pain appears, or CK climbs into the many thousands, the tone changes. Our article on high AST with normal ALT helps separate benign training effects from patterns that need medical care.
CRP, ESR and WBC: Recovery Supplements Cannot Hide Inflammation
CRP below 3 mg/L is often considered low-grade or normal depending on the test, while CRP above 10 mg/L usually suggests infection, tissue response or recent major exertion. Recovery supplements should not be used to mask persistently high inflammation markers.
CRP can jump after a race, a viral illness, a dental infection or an overloaded training block. A runner who checks CRP the morning after a half marathon may see a number that would look concerning in a resting office worker.
The pattern matters more than the single value. CRP 18 mg/L with fever and high neutrophils is not a tart-cherry question; CRP 4 mg/L with poor sleep, rising resting heart rate and heavy legs may point to under-recovery, as discussed in our CRP after infection guide.
Omega-3 supplements, tart cherry and curcumin have mixed evidence for soreness and inflammation. I use them cautiously because blunting soreness is not always the goal; soreness sometimes tells the athlete the plan is too aggressive.
A practical recovery screen includes CBC differential, CRP, ferritin, CK, thyroid markers if fatigue is persistent, and a training diary. No capsule interprets that combination better than an honest look at mileage, sleep and food.
Thyroid, Sex Hormones and RED-S: The Fatigue Pattern Supplements Miss
Normal ferritin and vitamin D do not rule out low energy availability, thyroid dysfunction or Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport. TSH is commonly about 0.4-4.0 mIU/L, but runners with fatigue may also need free T4, free T3, menstrual history, testosterone or other hormone context.
The 2023 IOC consensus statement on Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport describes RED-S as impaired physiology from low energy availability, affecting bone, hormones, immunity, metabolism and performance (Mountjoy et al., 2023). In plain English: the athlete is training more than the body can fund.
I worry when a runner has low-normal T3, menstrual changes, low libido, recurrent stress injuries, low ferritin, low vitamin D and stubborn fatigue. Our overview of hormonal blood tests is a useful starting point when the symptom list is wider than “I need magnesium.”
Thyroid interpretation gets messy in endurance athletes because illness, fasting and heavy training can lower T3 without classic hypothyroidism. A single TSH of 3.8 mIU/L means something different if free T4 is normal, thyroid antibodies are positive, or the athlete has been dieting for 12 weeks.
Supplements cannot fix chronic under-fueling. If the pattern suggests RED-S, the treatment is usually food, rest, training changes and clinician support—not a larger supplement stack.
When to Test: Timing Rules That Stop False Alarms
For baseline runner labs, test after 48-72 hours without unusually hard training, normal hydration and stable eating. Testing immediately after a race can distort CK, AST, ALT, WBC, creatinine, glucose, sodium and CRP enough to create a supplement plan you do not actually need.
I prefer morning testing for fatigue panels when cortisol, testosterone, glucose or fasting lipids are involved. Water is fine for most fasting tests, but long fasts plus a hard session the night before can make BUN, ketones and glucose look stranger than they are.
Our fasting versus non-fasting guide explains which values shift after food. For runners, the bigger confounder is often not breakfast; it is the 18-mile run, sauna, alcohol, poor sleep or NSAID use in the 2 days before testing.
Repeat abnormal values before building a long-term supplement plan, unless the result is urgent. A potassium of 5.6 mmol/L from a hemolyzed sample, for example, is a lab handling issue until proven otherwise.
Trend beats snapshot. Our guide to blood test variability helps runners decide whether a 10% shift is noise, training adaptation or a real signal.
How Kantesti AI Turns Runner Labs Into Safer Supplement Decisions
Kantesti AI interprets runner blood tests by combining reference ranges, unit conversion, biomarker patterns, symptom context and previous results in about 60 seconds. Our platform can read uploaded PDFs or photos and connect low ferritin, vitamin D deficiency, B12 patterns, electrolytes and recovery markers without treating one flagged result as the whole story.
Our AI blood test platform uses a 2.78T parameter Health AI and supports 75+ languages across 127+ countries. That international scope matters because ferritin units, vitamin D units and lab reference intervals differ; a 25-OH D result may appear as ng/mL in one country and nmol/L in another.
Kantesti AI is CE Marked, HIPAA-aligned, GDPR-compliant and ISO 27001 certified, with clinical standards described on our medical validation page. Our benchmark work is also published for review in the Kantesti AI Engine validation record.
The feature I like most for runners is trend analysis. Ferritin moving from 52 to 31 ng/mL over a marathon block is not “normal” just because both numbers sit inside a population range.
You can upload a recent panel to Try Free AI Blood Test Analysis and compare your labs with a supplement plan before buying anything. It is still not a replacement for your clinician, but it is a much better starting point than a social-media stack.
Research Notes, Safety Checks and the Runner Bottom Line
The safest supplement plan for runners is a short list tied to abnormal labs, symptoms and a recheck date. If ferritin, vitamin D, B12, electrolytes, kidney markers, liver enzymes and inflammation markers are normal, the next “supplement” may be sleep, carbohydrate, periodized training or medical review.
I’m Thomas Klein, MD, Chief Medical Officer at Kantesti LTD, and my advice to runners is deliberately boring: do not chase every marginal gain with a new bottle. Our clinical review process is guided by physicians and advisors listed on the Medical Advisory Board, because YMYL health content needs human judgment, not just pattern matching.
Red flags deserve care, not a supplement experiment: chest pain, fainting, black stools, unexplained weight loss, severe shortness of breath, sodium below 130 mmol/L, potassium above 6.0 mmol/L, hemoglobin below 10 g/dL, or CK with dark urine and severe muscle pain. If any of those appear, contact a clinician or urgent service in your country.
Kantesti LTD. (2026). B Negative Blood Type, LDH Blood Test & Reticulocyte Count Guide. Figshare. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.31333819. ResearchGate. Academia.edu.
Kantesti LTD. (2026). Diarrhea After Fasting, Black Specks in Stool & GI Guide 2026. Figshare. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.31438111. ResearchGate. Academia.edu.
If you want one practical next step, collect your last 2-3 lab reports and upload them to Kantesti. A trend-based read of ferritin, vitamin D, B12, magnesium, electrolytes and recovery markers is where sensible runner supplementation starts.
Frequently Asked Questions
What blood tests should runners check before taking supplements?
Runners should usually check CBC, ferritin, transferrin saturation, 25-OH vitamin D, B12, folate, magnesium, sodium, potassium, creatinine, BUN, AST, ALT, CK and CRP before choosing supplements. Ferritin below 30 ng/mL, vitamin D below 20 ng/mL or B12 below 200 pg/mL can change supplement decisions. Testing after 48-72 hours of easier training gives a cleaner baseline than testing right after a race.
Should runners take iron if ferritin is low but hemoglobin is normal?
Runners with ferritin below 30 ng/mL can have depleted iron stores even when hemoglobin is still normal. Iron replacement is most convincing when ferritin is low, transferrin saturation is below 20%, symptoms fit and there is a likely cause such as heavy periods, low intake or frequent blood donation. A common clinician-guided approach is 40-65 mg elemental iron every other day with a recheck in 6-8 weeks.
What vitamin D level is low for endurance athletes?
A 25-OH vitamin D level below 20 ng/mL is generally considered deficiency, while 20-29 ng/mL is often called insufficiency. Many endurance clinicians aim for 30-50 ng/mL in runners with fatigue, winter training, low sun exposure or stress fracture risk. Levels above 100-150 ng/mL may indicate excess and should prompt a calcium and supplement review.
Does magnesium help runner cramps?
Magnesium helps cramps mainly when magnesium deficiency or a compatible electrolyte pattern exists. Serum magnesium normally runs about 1.7-2.2 mg/dL, but it can miss intracellular depletion, so sodium, potassium, calcium, kidney function, medications and training load should also be reviewed. A typical adult supplement range is 200-400 mg elemental magnesium daily, but runners with significant kidney disease should not self-dose.
Can creatine make runner kidney labs look abnormal?
Creatine can raise serum creatinine slightly because creatinine is produced from creatine metabolism, and that does not automatically mean kidney damage. A runner taking 3-5 g/day may need kidney interpretation using prior creatinine, eGFR trend, cystatin C and urine albumin-creatinine ratio. A rising creatinine with abnormal urine protein, low eGFR or symptoms deserves clinician review.
Why are AST and CK high after a marathon?
AST and CK can rise after a marathon because skeletal muscle releases enzymes after prolonged mechanical stress. CK can exceed 1000 IU/L after hard endurance events, and AST may rise more than ALT when the source is muscle rather than liver. Repeating AST, ALT and CK after 5-7 easier days often clarifies whether the change was exercise-related.
Are generic supplement stacks good for runners?
Generic supplement stacks are usually a poor fit for runners because the same symptom can come from low ferritin, vitamin D deficiency, B12 deficiency, low energy availability, dehydration, overtraining or illness. A lab-first plan ties each supplement to a marker, a dose and a recheck date. If labs are normal, performance may improve more from sleep, carbohydrate timing, training adjustment or medical assessment than from adding more products.
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📚 Referenced Research Publications
Klein, T., Mitchell, S., & Weber, H. (2026). B Negative Blood Type, LDH Blood Test & Reticulocyte Count Guide. Kantesti AI Medical Research.
Klein, T., Mitchell, S., & Weber, H. (2026). Diarrhea After Fasting, Black Specks in Stool & GI Guide 2026. Kantesti AI Medical Research.
📖 External Medical References
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⚕️ Medical Disclaimer
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment decisions.
E-E-A-T Trust Signals
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Physician-led clinical review of lab interpretation workflows.
Expertise
Laboratory medicine focus on how biomarkers behave in clinical context.
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Written by Dr. Thomas Klein with review by Dr. Sarah Mitchell and Prof. Dr. Hans Weber.
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Evidence-based interpretation with clear follow-up pathways to reduce alarm.