Step 1: Foundational Routine Labs
Start with these widely available tests to identify abnormalities:
| Lab Category | Key Tests | Clues for Infections/Toxins |
|---|---|---|
| Inflammation | – CRP (C-reactive protein) – ESR (Erythrocyte sedimentation rate) | ↑ Chronic inflammation (hidden infection, mold, heavy metals). ESR >40 mm/hr warrants investigation. |
| Liver Function | – ALT/AST – ALP (Alkaline phosphatase) – GGT (Gamma-glutamyl transferase) – Bilirubin | ↑ Liver enzymes (toxin overload, hepatitis, alcohol, pesticides, drug toxicity). GGT is sensitive to environmental toxins. |
| Kidney Function | – BUN – Creatinine – eGFR | ↓ Kidney function (heavy metals, chronic infections, toxin accumulation). |
| Complete Blood Count (CBC) | – WBC (white blood cells) – Neutrophils/Lymphocytes – Eosinophils – Platelets | – ↑ WBC/neutrophils: Bacterial infection – ↑ Lymphocytes: Viral/chronic infection – ↑ Eosinophils: Parasites, mold, toxins – ↓ Platelets: Viral infections, sepsis, toxins |
| Iron & Anemia | – Ferritin – Iron/TIBC – CBC anemia markers | ↑ Ferritin (chronic inflammation, infection). Anemia of chronic disease (hidden infections). |
| Thyroid | – TSH, Free T3/T4 | ↑ TSH/subclinical hypothyroidism (toxins like heavy metals, fluoride, infections like EBV). |
| Vitamin D | – 25-OH Vitamin D | ↓ Levels weaken immunity → higher infection/toxin susceptibility. |
Step 2: Infection-Specific Clues in Routine Labs
Subtle patterns that suggest hidden infections:
- Chronic Viral Infections (EBV, CMV, Lyme co-infections):
- ↑ Atypical lymphocytes (CBC)
- ↑ Ferritin (without iron overload)
- ↓ Total protein/Albumin
- Abnormal liver enzymes (ALT/AST)
- Bacterial/Persistent Infections (Lyme, Bartonella):
- ↑ CRP/ESR despite “normal” exams
- Low WBC (leukopenia) or high WBC (leukocytosis)
- ↑ Platelets (thrombocytosis)
- Parasites/Fungal Overgrowth:
- ↑ Eosinophils (CBC)
- ↑ IgE (if tested)
- ↓ B12/Folate (malabsorption)
Step 3: Toxin Exposure Markers
Indirect signs of toxin burden:
| Toxin Source | Routine Lab Clues | Follow-Up Tests |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy Metals | ↑ Liver enzymes (ALT/AST/GGT), ↓ eGFR, ↑ proteinuria | Urine toxic metals (provoked/unprovoked) |
| Mold Mycotoxins | ↑ CRP, ↑ Eosinophils, ↓ Vitamin D, ↑ C4a (if tested) | Urine mycotoxin panel (RealTime Labs) |
| Pesticides/Solvents | ↑ GGT, ↑ Liver enzymes, neuropathy (clinical sign) | Environmental toxin panels |
| Chronic Inflammation | ↑ CRP/ESR, ↑ Ferritin, ↓ Albumin | IL-6, TNF-alpha (cytokine testing) |
Step 4: Advanced Clues in Basic Urinalysis
Don’t overlook these in a routine urine test:
- Proteinuria (kidney damage from toxins/infections)
- Glucosuria (without diabetes → heavy metal toxicity)
- Casts/Crystals (kidney inflammation)
Step 5: Key Patterns to Investigate
- Triad of Concern:
↑ CRP + ↑ Ferritin + ↓ Vitamin D = High suspicion for hidden infection/toxin. - Liver-Kidney Link:
↑ GGT + ↓ eGFR = Toxin overload (alcohol, metals, solvents). - Immune Exhaustion:
↓ Lymphocytes + ↓ Albumin = Chronic immune stress.
Limitations of Routine Labs
- ❌ Cannot identify specific pathogens/toxins (e.g., Lyme, mercury, mold species).
- ❌ Normal results don’t rule out stealth issues (e.g., chronic Lyme often has normal CRP/WBC).
- ✅ Use them as “red flags” to justify deeper testing:
- Infection testing: PCR, serology, blood cultures.
- Toxin testing: Urine mycotoxins, heavy metals, glyphosate.
Action Plan
- Run all foundational labs (CBC, CMP, CRP, ESR, ferritin, Vitamin D).
- Identify patterns (e.g., ↑ inflammation + liver stress).
- Targeted testing:
- Infections: EBV/CMV IgM/IgG, Lyme immunoblot, stool parasites.
- Toxins: Urine mycotoxins, heavy metals (blood/urine), environmental panels.
- Support detox pathways (if toxins suspected):
- Glutathione, NAC, sauna, fiber.
Always work with a functional/integrative medicine provider. Hidden infections/toxins require clinical correlation with symptoms (fatigue, brain fog, joint pain).
📌 Example: A patient with ↑ CRP, ↑ GGT, and ↑ eosinophils should be tested for mold toxicity and parasitic infections.
