Why Most Lab Tests Miss the Mark

Hey,

How many times have you been told, “Your labs are fine,” and sent on your way?

Here’s the problem: who chose what counts as “normal”? And more importantly—does “normal” mean your body is functioning optimally?

Let’s say your vitamin D is 31. The lab range says 30–50.  
Are we really going to say everything’s fine—just because you're 1 point above the cut-off?

That’s how conventional medicine often works:
- One number outside the box = diagnosis
- One number inside the box = “nothing to worry about”

But health doesn’t work in black and white.  
It’s a spectrum—and we need to look for early dysfunction, not just wait for disease.

At Apollo Health, we use functional ranges—more refined reference points based on what helps people thrive, not just avoid a diagnosis.

That’s why we offer Functional Lab Reviews. Not to chase labs, but to ask:
> Is this system working the way it should? And if not, what’s the strategy to fix it?

Next email: the one lab marker I think everyone should know—but most doctors never run it.

Talk soon,  
Dr. G

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There’s More to Health Than Just Prescriptions. The Science Proves It