HSA / FSA eligible

At-Home
GLP Monitoring.

Fast. Painless.

Track what GLP therapy changes beyond weight40+ lab markersBody-composition trendsSymptom check-insNo lab visits
Start monitoring$174

+ Shipping & handling.

1M+Biomarkers tested
CLIA & CAPAccredited labs

If you're on GLP therapy, don't just track weight.

Track what appetite suppression and weight loss may be doing to your metabolism, heart health, hormones, nutrition, muscle, and overall health.

Useful before you start, while you are using GLP therapy, and as you taper off.

  • 40+ direct and calculated lab markers across metabolism, lipids, liver, kidney, thyroid, hormones, nutrition, and inflammation
  • In-app body-composition scanning to track fat loss vs muscle loss
  • Symptom check-ins, insights, and actions built around your results
Tolerance scoreBaseline

How well your body is handling GLP-1, built from your labs, body composition, and symptom check-ins.

GLP tolerance scoreFirst result

Your body's response to GLP therapy, scored from labs, body comp, and symptoms.

Weight change paceFollow-up trend

Compares progress between tests

Body compositionIn-app scan

Track fat loss versus lean mass

SymptomsCheck-ins

Track what changes between tests

40+lab markers
Monthlyearly monitoring
Quarterlymaintenance checks

Not all weight loss is equal.

GLP medications can drop the number on the scale fast, but how much of that loss is fat versus muscle is the difference between a stronger you and a smaller, weaker you. Our GLP monitoring program tracks both.

Weight progress

Steady, healthy loss

-24 lb

From 240.7 lb to 216.5 lb - 3 months on therapy

245235225215
STARTMONTH 1MONTH 2TODAY
Body composition

Fat down. Muscle stays.

Start
32%
68%
240.7 lb
Month 1
30%
70%
232.1 lb
Month 2
28%
72%
224.8 lb
Today
25%
75%
216.5 lb
-21.3 lb
fat lost - 89% of total
-2.7 lb
lean preserved - <15% loss
Biomarker panel

Ongoing health tracking.

HbA1c5.2% -0.6
Optimal
ApoB82 mg/dL -14
Optimal
Triglycerides158 mg/dL -42
Fair
hs-CRP0.9 mg/L -1.4
Optimal

Weight loss is the headline. Your biology is the story.

The panel is built for people already using, planning to use, or transitioning off GLP-based medication who want better trend visibility.

Metabolism

Confirm the wins beyond weight

HbA1c, estimated average glucose, C-peptide, and lipid trends help show whether your metabolism is changing in the right direction.

Safety

Catch issues that should not be ignored

BUN, creatinine, eGFR, liver markers, bilirubin, and inflammation markers help flag changes that deserve attention during rapid weight loss.

Body composition

Lose fat without giving up muscle

Weight alone can hide lean-mass loss. The SiPhox app helps you monitor body composition so you can adjust protein, training, and pace.

Energy

Keep nutrition and hormones in view

B12, ferritin, thyroid, and testosterone markers help explain fatigue, brain fog, recovery, libido, and mood during lower food intake.

Included with your membership

Everything you need to track, understand, and optimize your health.

% Hemoglobin A1CLong-term blood sugar control
5.3 %
Estim. Avg Glu (eAG)Estimated average glucose
105 mg/dL
C-PeptideInsulin production signal
2.1 ng/mL
Cholesterol, TotalOverall cholesterol level
174 mg/dL
LDL Cholesterol"Bad" cholesterol
92 mg/dL
HDL Cholesterol"Good" cholesterol
62 mg/dL
TriglyceridesInsulin sensitivity marker
84 mg/dL
Triglycerides:HDL RatioCardiometabolic health signal
1.35
LDL-C:HDL-C RatioCholesterol balance
1.48
Total Cholesterol:HDL RatioHeart-health ratio
2.81
Apolipoprotein B (APOB)Atherogenic particle count
78 mg/dL
VLDL Cholesterol (Calc)Triglyceride-rich cholesterol
17 mg/dL
High-Sensitivity CRPLow-grade inflammation
1.1 mg/L
Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)Liver enzyme
24 U/L
Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST)Liver and muscle enzyme
22 U/L
Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP)Liver and bile-duct marker
68 U/L
Total BilirubinLiver processing marker
0.7 mg/dL
Direct BilirubinBilirubin fraction
0.2 mg/dL
AlbuminProtein and liver status
4.6 g/dL
Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin (SHBG)Hormone transport protein
48 nmol/L
Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN)Hydration and protein signal
18 mg/dL
CreatinineKidney and muscle context
0.82 mg/dL
eGFRKidney filtration estimate
103 mL/min/1.73 m2
BUN:Creatinine RatioHydration pressure signal
22
Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH)Thyroid signaling
1.8 uIU/mL
Free Thyroxine (Free T4)Available thyroid hormone
1.2 ng/dL
Testosterone, Total (Males)Total androgen level
540 ng/dL
Testosterone, Free (calc)Bioavailable testosterone
11.8 pg/mL
% Free TestosteroneActive testosterone fraction
2.2 %
CortisolStress-axis marker
12.4 ug/dL
25-(OH) Vitamin DVitamin D status
46 ng/mL
Vitamin B12Energy and nerve nutrient
612 pg/mL
FolateB-vitamin status
12.8 ng/mL
FerritinIron storage
72 ng/mL
IronCirculating iron
92 ug/dL
Unsaturated iron-binding capacity test (UIBC)Iron-binding reserve
230 ug/dL
Iron Bind.Cap.(TIBC)Total iron-binding capacity
322 ug/dL
Iron SaturationIron availability
29 %
Total ProteinProtein status
7.1 g/dL

Comprehensive Biomarker Testing

Test your biomarkers with comprehensive panels without leaving home.

Blood Panel - Jan 2026
Quest Diagnostics
Complete Metabolic
LabCorp
Lipid Panel - Dec 2025
Stanford Health Care
Thyroid Function Panel
Mayo Clinic Laboratories

Centralized Health Dashboard

Seamlessly upload 3rd party tests to track your whole health in 1 dashboard.

HbA1c shows the metabolic win

Metabolic insight

Relevant Biomarkers

% Hemoglobin A1C

HbA1c in the optimal range is one of the clearest signals that GLP-1 therapy is improving glucose control over time.

Insulin response shows deeper progress

Insulin insight

Relevant Biomarkers

C-Peptide
% Hemoglobin A1C

Insulin-related markers help show whether appetite changes are translating into better metabolic function, not just lower scale weight.

ApoB shows risk weight can miss

Heart health insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Apolipoprotein B (APOB)
LDL Cholesterol

ApoB helps reveal residual cardiovascular risk that may remain even when GLP-1-driven weight loss is moving in the right direction.

Triglycerides often move first

Lipid insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Triglycerides

Triglycerides are often one of the lipid signals that respond most strongly as insulin sensitivity improves during GLP-1 therapy.

ALT reflects liver stress

Liver insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)
Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST)

ALT commonly improves when fatty-liver stress decreases, making it a useful marker to watch as weight and metabolism change.

BUN catches hydration pressure

Hydration insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN)

BUN can rise when nausea, lower appetite, or reduced fluid intake create dehydration pressure during GLP-1 titration.

Creatinine adds kidney and muscle context

Kidney insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Creatinine
eGFR

Creatinine and eGFR help distinguish healthy kidney trends from patterns that may reflect dehydration or lean-mass loss.

Thyroid markers keep energy in context

Thyroid insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
Free Thyroxine (Free T4)

TSH and Free T4 help explain whether fatigue, pace of weight change, or rebound patterns may have thyroid context.

Free testosterone tracks preservation

Hormone insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Testosterone, Free (calc)
Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin (SHBG)

Free testosterone helps answer whether weight loss is happening while preserving hormone health and recovery capacity.

B12 and ferritin explain hidden fatigue

Nutrition insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Vitamin B12
Ferritin

Lower food intake can expose B12 or iron-store gaps, two common reasons fatigue or brain fog can show up during GLP-1 therapy.

HbA1c shows the metabolic win

Metabolic insight

Relevant Biomarkers

% Hemoglobin A1C

HbA1c in the optimal range is one of the clearest signals that GLP-1 therapy is improving glucose control over time.

Insulin response shows deeper progress

Insulin insight

Relevant Biomarkers

C-Peptide
% Hemoglobin A1C

Insulin-related markers help show whether appetite changes are translating into better metabolic function, not just lower scale weight.

ApoB shows risk weight can miss

Heart health insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Apolipoprotein B (APOB)
LDL Cholesterol

ApoB helps reveal residual cardiovascular risk that may remain even when GLP-1-driven weight loss is moving in the right direction.

Triglycerides often move first

Lipid insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Triglycerides

Triglycerides are often one of the lipid signals that respond most strongly as insulin sensitivity improves during GLP-1 therapy.

ALT reflects liver stress

Liver insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)
Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST)

ALT commonly improves when fatty-liver stress decreases, making it a useful marker to watch as weight and metabolism change.

BUN catches hydration pressure

Hydration insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN)

BUN can rise when nausea, lower appetite, or reduced fluid intake create dehydration pressure during GLP-1 titration.

Creatinine adds kidney and muscle context

Kidney insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Creatinine
eGFR

Creatinine and eGFR help distinguish healthy kidney trends from patterns that may reflect dehydration or lean-mass loss.

Thyroid markers keep energy in context

Thyroid insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
Free Thyroxine (Free T4)

TSH and Free T4 help explain whether fatigue, pace of weight change, or rebound patterns may have thyroid context.

Free testosterone tracks preservation

Hormone insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Testosterone, Free (calc)
Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin (SHBG)

Free testosterone helps answer whether weight loss is happening while preserving hormone health and recovery capacity.

B12 and ferritin explain hidden fatigue

Nutrition insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Vitamin B12
Ferritin

Lower food intake can expose B12 or iron-store gaps, two common reasons fatigue or brain fog can show up during GLP-1 therapy.

HbA1c shows the metabolic win

Metabolic insight

Relevant Biomarkers

% Hemoglobin A1C

HbA1c in the optimal range is one of the clearest signals that GLP-1 therapy is improving glucose control over time.

Insulin response shows deeper progress

Insulin insight

Relevant Biomarkers

C-Peptide
% Hemoglobin A1C

Insulin-related markers help show whether appetite changes are translating into better metabolic function, not just lower scale weight.

ApoB shows risk weight can miss

Heart health insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Apolipoprotein B (APOB)
LDL Cholesterol

ApoB helps reveal residual cardiovascular risk that may remain even when GLP-1-driven weight loss is moving in the right direction.

Triglycerides often move first

Lipid insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Triglycerides

Triglycerides are often one of the lipid signals that respond most strongly as insulin sensitivity improves during GLP-1 therapy.

ALT reflects liver stress

Liver insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)
Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST)

ALT commonly improves when fatty-liver stress decreases, making it a useful marker to watch as weight and metabolism change.

BUN catches hydration pressure

Hydration insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN)

BUN can rise when nausea, lower appetite, or reduced fluid intake create dehydration pressure during GLP-1 titration.

Creatinine adds kidney and muscle context

Kidney insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Creatinine
eGFR

Creatinine and eGFR help distinguish healthy kidney trends from patterns that may reflect dehydration or lean-mass loss.

Thyroid markers keep energy in context

Thyroid insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
Free Thyroxine (Free T4)

TSH and Free T4 help explain whether fatigue, pace of weight change, or rebound patterns may have thyroid context.

Free testosterone tracks preservation

Hormone insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Testosterone, Free (calc)
Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin (SHBG)

Free testosterone helps answer whether weight loss is happening while preserving hormone health and recovery capacity.

B12 and ferritin explain hidden fatigue

Nutrition insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Vitamin B12
Ferritin

Lower food intake can expose B12 or iron-store gaps, two common reasons fatigue or brain fog can show up during GLP-1 therapy.

HbA1c shows the metabolic win

Metabolic insight

Relevant Biomarkers

% Hemoglobin A1C

HbA1c in the optimal range is one of the clearest signals that GLP-1 therapy is improving glucose control over time.

Insulin response shows deeper progress

Insulin insight

Relevant Biomarkers

C-Peptide
% Hemoglobin A1C

Insulin-related markers help show whether appetite changes are translating into better metabolic function, not just lower scale weight.

ApoB shows risk weight can miss

Heart health insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Apolipoprotein B (APOB)
LDL Cholesterol

ApoB helps reveal residual cardiovascular risk that may remain even when GLP-1-driven weight loss is moving in the right direction.

Triglycerides often move first

Lipid insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Triglycerides

Triglycerides are often one of the lipid signals that respond most strongly as insulin sensitivity improves during GLP-1 therapy.

ALT reflects liver stress

Liver insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)
Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST)

ALT commonly improves when fatty-liver stress decreases, making it a useful marker to watch as weight and metabolism change.

BUN catches hydration pressure

Hydration insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN)

BUN can rise when nausea, lower appetite, or reduced fluid intake create dehydration pressure during GLP-1 titration.

Creatinine adds kidney and muscle context

Kidney insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Creatinine
eGFR

Creatinine and eGFR help distinguish healthy kidney trends from patterns that may reflect dehydration or lean-mass loss.

Thyroid markers keep energy in context

Thyroid insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
Free Thyroxine (Free T4)

TSH and Free T4 help explain whether fatigue, pace of weight change, or rebound patterns may have thyroid context.

Free testosterone tracks preservation

Hormone insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Testosterone, Free (calc)
Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin (SHBG)

Free testosterone helps answer whether weight loss is happening while preserving hormone health and recovery capacity.

B12 and ferritin explain hidden fatigue

Nutrition insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Vitamin B12
Ferritin

Lower food intake can expose B12 or iron-store gaps, two common reasons fatigue or brain fog can show up during GLP-1 therapy.

HbA1c shows the metabolic win

Metabolic insight

Relevant Biomarkers

% Hemoglobin A1C

HbA1c in the optimal range is one of the clearest signals that GLP-1 therapy is improving glucose control over time.

Insulin response shows deeper progress

Insulin insight

Relevant Biomarkers

C-Peptide
% Hemoglobin A1C

Insulin-related markers help show whether appetite changes are translating into better metabolic function, not just lower scale weight.

ApoB shows risk weight can miss

Heart health insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Apolipoprotein B (APOB)
LDL Cholesterol

ApoB helps reveal residual cardiovascular risk that may remain even when GLP-1-driven weight loss is moving in the right direction.

Triglycerides often move first

Lipid insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Triglycerides

Triglycerides are often one of the lipid signals that respond most strongly as insulin sensitivity improves during GLP-1 therapy.

ALT reflects liver stress

Liver insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)
Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST)

ALT commonly improves when fatty-liver stress decreases, making it a useful marker to watch as weight and metabolism change.

BUN catches hydration pressure

Hydration insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN)

BUN can rise when nausea, lower appetite, or reduced fluid intake create dehydration pressure during GLP-1 titration.

Creatinine adds kidney and muscle context

Kidney insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Creatinine
eGFR

Creatinine and eGFR help distinguish healthy kidney trends from patterns that may reflect dehydration or lean-mass loss.

Thyroid markers keep energy in context

Thyroid insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
Free Thyroxine (Free T4)

TSH and Free T4 help explain whether fatigue, pace of weight change, or rebound patterns may have thyroid context.

Free testosterone tracks preservation

Hormone insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Testosterone, Free (calc)
Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin (SHBG)

Free testosterone helps answer whether weight loss is happening while preserving hormone health and recovery capacity.

B12 and ferritin explain hidden fatigue

Nutrition insight

Relevant Biomarkers

Vitamin B12
Ferritin

Lower food intake can expose B12 or iron-store gaps, two common reasons fatigue or brain fog can show up during GLP-1 therapy.

GLP Insights

See what your markers suggest about tolerance, progress, and rebound risk.

Chat with Sai

24/7 Health Assistant

Chat with Sai, about your results, health and longevity.

Lion's Mane
Berberine
NMN
Apigenin
Glycine
L-Citrulline
Beta-Alanine
Beetroot Extract
Grape Seed Extract
Phosphatidylserine
Lion's Mane
Berberine
NMN
Apigenin
Glycine
L-Citrulline
Beta-Alanine
Beetroot Extract
Grape Seed Extract
Phosphatidylserine
Iron
Calcium
Vitamin K2
Selenium
Folate
Vitamin D3
NAD+
Omega-3
Quercetin
Green Tea Extract
Iron
Calcium
Vitamin K2
Selenium
Folate
Vitamin D3
NAD+
Omega-3
Quercetin
Green Tea Extract
L-Theanine
Magnesium
Rhodiola
Ginseng
Biotin
Vitamin B12
Alpha Lipoic Acid
Glucosamine
Chondroitin
Probiotics
L-Theanine
Magnesium
Rhodiola
Ginseng
Biotin
Vitamin B12
Alpha Lipoic Acid
Glucosamine
Chondroitin
Probiotics
Zinc
MSM
Collagen
L-Glutamine
Creatine
BCAA
Vitamin C
L-Arginine
Taurine
Melatonin
Zinc
MSM
Collagen
L-Glutamine
Creatine
BCAA
Vitamin C
L-Arginine
Taurine
Melatonin
GABA
St. John's Wort
Valerian Root
CoQ10
Milk Thistle
Spirulina
Turmeric
Chlorella
Wheatgrass
Maca Root
GABA
St. John's Wort
Valerian Root
CoQ10
Milk Thistle
Spirulina
Turmeric
Chlorella
Wheatgrass
Maca Root
Ginkgo Biloba
Saw Palmetto
Black Cohosh
Evening Primrose
Garlic Extract
Ashwagandha
Echinacea
Vitamin E
Chromium
Resveratrol
Ginkgo Biloba
Saw Palmetto
Black Cohosh
Evening Primrose
Garlic Extract
Ashwagandha
Echinacea
Vitamin E
Chromium
Resveratrol
Inositol
Bromelain
Astaxanthin
PQQ
Psyllium Husk
Boswellia
Bacopa Monnieri
Hawthorn Berry
Manganese
Copper
Inositol
Bromelain
Astaxanthin
PQQ
Psyllium Husk
Boswellia
Bacopa Monnieri
Hawthorn Berry
Manganese
Copper

Nutritional Optimization

Catch nutritional deficiencies early.

Apple Watch
Apple Watch
Sleep: 7.2h
HRV: 45ms
Resting HR: 62 bpm
Oura Ring
Oura Ring
Sleep Score: 87
Readiness: 92
Body Temp: +0.2°C
Fitbit
Fitbit
Active Zone: 142 min
Calories: 2,341
Sleep Score: 78

Wearable Sync

Connect your wearables to track sleep, activity & glucose.

Set your body-composition baseline, then watch what changes.

Ensure you are losing weight in a healthy way by connecting fat loss, lean mass, symptoms, and biomarkers in one GLP monitoring loop.

First testSet your starting point

Capture your weight, body composition, labs, hydration, and nutrition before you compare trends.

Follow-up testsConfirm healthy loss

See whether weight loss is coming from fat, not muscle, while symptoms and biomarkers stay on track.

Body scansSeparate fat from muscle

Track fat loss and lean-mass preservation alongside your biomarker trends.

Body-composition scanner

Track fat loss and muscle preservation beside your biomarker trends.

Body-composition trendFat loss vs lean mass
Wearables and CGM contextConnect where available
Action planPersonalized after results

The markers that matter for GLP therapy tolerance.

The panel focuses on the markers and explanations that matter most when appetite, weight, hydration, and body composition are changing. Start with key markers, then explore the full panel by category.

Key markers

% Hemoglobin A1C

Shows your average blood sugar over the past three months. GLP-based therapies often improve this dramatically, so tracking it lets you see one of the clearest wins from treatment.

C-Peptide

Shows how much insulin your body is producing. Useful context when appetite, blood sugar control, and metabolic demand are changing.

Apolipoprotein B (APOB)

Counts the particles most tied to atherosclerotic risk, giving a sharper signal than LDL alone.

High-Sensitivity CRP

Tracks low-grade inflammation, a useful signal when metabolic risk and body composition are changing.

Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)

A liver enzyme that can improve as fatty-liver stress decreases during weight loss.

Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN)

Helps show whether you may be dehydrated, especially during dose increases when nausea and reduced fluid intake can creep up.

Vitamin B12

An essential nutrient that can drop when you eat less meat, fish, dairy, and eggs. Low B12 can cause fatigue and brain fog.

Ferritin

Your iron storage. Especially important for women because low iron can quickly lead to fatigue and lower exercise capacity.

In-app body-composition scanner

Tracks muscle versus fat instead of only total weight. The goal on therapy is to lose fat while keeping muscle.

Side effects are often the first sign your intake has changed too much.

GLP-1 therapy is known for GI side effects, but fatigue, brain fog, constipation, hair shedding, and muscle loss are often downstream signals of lower appetite, lower calories, and lower nutrient availability.

74%reported GI side effects in semaglutide 2.4 mg trials

Nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, and constipation were common during treatment, especially around dose escalation.

2-4 monthswhen hair shedding can appear after rapid weight loss

Hair loss often lags behind under-fueling, protein gaps, iron depletion, vitamin D changes, or metabolic stress.

Monitoring goal

Catch adaptive changes before they become bigger problems.

Frequent bloodwork and body-composition tracking can surface nutrient depletion, excessive weight-loss pace, dehydration pressure, or metabolic imbalance early enough to adjust diet, supplementation, training, or dosing conversations proactively.

FatigueBrain fogConstipationHair sheddingMuscle loss

Fatigue and brain fog

Lower appetite can create sustained calorie deficits and under-fueling before you notice it day to day.

Tracked withGlucose, HbA1c, albumin, weight trend
What this helps withSpot early energy-availability patterns so nutrition and dose conversations happen sooner.

Hair shedding and nutrient gaps

Rapid weight loss plus lower protein, iron, B12, folate, or vitamin D intake can stress hair follicles.

Tracked withFerritin, iron studies, B12, folate, vitamin D, albumin, total protein
What this helps withTrack depletion risk and guide targeted nutrition or supplementation discussions.

Dehydration and constipation

Reduced thirst, nausea, and smaller meals can lower fluid and electrolyte intake.

Tracked withBUN, creatinine, eGFR, BUN:creatinine ratio
What this helps withCatch hydration pressure before it turns into worsening symptoms or kidney stress.

Muscle loss and rebound risk

Fast weight loss with insufficient protein or resistance training can reduce lean mass.

Tracked withBody-composition scanner, total protein, albumin, testosterone context
What this helps withSeparate healthy fat loss from lean-mass loss so training, protein, and pace can be adjusted.

Frequently asked questions

Jump to

Real users. Real experiences.

Join over 50,000 individuals who have taken control of their health through data-driven insights and actions.

Colin

Colin's Story

SiPhox caught what no one saw

Chanda

Chanda's Story

A dangerous heart risk came to light

Ben

Ben's Story

Testing uncovered type 1 diabetes

Jonathan

Jonathan's Story

A shockingly high bioage revealed the truth

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Enterprise-grade security

Enterprise-grade security

Our servers meet or exceed all applicable data protection and privacy requirements. Your sensitive information is safeguarded by state-of-the-art security measures.

Zero Personal Data Selling Policy

Zero Personal Data Selling Policy

We have a strict no-sell policy for your personal information. Your data remains yours, period.

Complete Data Control

Complete Data Control

Delete your personal information from our servers at any time. We respect your right to data ownership and provide easy-to-use tools for data management.

Backed by leading experts in health optimization

Tsolmon Tsogbayar, MD

Tsolmon Tsogbayar, MD

Health Programs Lead, Health Innovation

Dr. Tsogbayar leverages her clinical expertise to develop innovative health solutions and evidence-based coaching. Dr. Tsogbayar previously practiced as a physician with a comprehensive training background, developing specialized expertise in cardiology and emergency medicine after gaining experience in primary care, allergy & immunology, internal medicine, and general surgery.

She earned her medical degree from Imperial College London, where she also completed her MSc in Human Molecular Genetics after obtaining a BSc in Biochemistry from Queen Mary University of London. Her academic research includes significant work in developmental cardiovascular genetics, with her thesis publication contributing to the understanding of genetic modifications on embryonic cardiovascular development.

Read more
Pavel Korecky, MD

Pavel Korecky, MD

Director of Clinical Product Operations

Director of Clinical Product Operations at SiPhox Health with a background in medicine and a passion for health optimization. Experienced in leading software and clinical development teams, contributing to patents, launching health-related products, and turning diagnostics into actionable tools.

Read more
Tash Milinkovic, MD

Tash Milinkovic, MD

Health Programs Lead, Heart & Metabolic

Dr. Natasha Milinkovic is part of the clinical product team at SiPhox Health, having graduated from the University of Bristol Medical School. Her medical career includes rotations across medical and surgical specialties, with specialized research in vascular surgery, focusing on recovery and post-operative pain outcomes. Dr. Milinkovic built her expertise in emergency medicine as a clinical fellow at a major trauma center before practicing at a central London teaching hospital throughout the pandemic.

She has contributed to global health initiatives, implementing surgical safety standards and protocols across rural Uganda. Dr. Milinkovic initially joined SiPhox Health to spearhead the health coaching initiative and has been a key contributor in the development and launch of the Heart and Metabolic program. She is passionate about addressing health disparities by building scalable healthcare solutions.

Read more
Paul Thompson, MD

Paul Thompson, MD

Advisor, Cardiology

Paul D. Thompson is Chief of Cardiology Emeritus of Hartford Hospital and Professor Emeritus at University of Connecticut Medical School. He has authored over 500 scientific articles on cardiovascular risk factors, the effects of exercise, and beyond. He received National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) Preventive Cardiology Academic Award, and has received NIH funding for multiple studies.

Dr. Thompson’s interests in exercise, general cardiology and sports cardiology originated from his own distance running: he qualified for the 1972 Olympic Marathon Trials as a 3rd year medical student and finished 16th in the 1976 Boston Marathon. Dr. Thompson publishes a blog 500 Rules of Cardiology where he shares lessons and anecdotes that he has learned over his extensive career as a physician, researcher and teacher.

Read more
Robert Lufkin, MD

Robert Lufkin, MD

Advisor, Metabolic Health

Physician/medical school professor (UCLA and USC) and New York Times bestselling author empowering people to take back their metabolic health with lifestyle and other tools. A veteran of the Today Show, USA Today, and a regular contributor to FOX and other network news stations, his weekly video podcast reaches over 500,000 people. After reversing chronic disease and transforming his own life he is making it his mission to help others do the same.

His latest book, ‘Lies I Taught In Medical School’ is an instant New York Times bestseller and has re-framed how we think about metabolic health and longevity. In addition to being a practicing physician, he is author of over 200 peer reviewed scientific papers and 14 books that are available in fourteen languages.

Read more
Ben Bikman, PhD

Ben Bikman, PhD

Advisor, Metabolic Research

Benjamin Bikman earned his Ph.D. in Bioenergetics and was a postdoctoral fellow with the Duke-National University of Singapore in metabolic disorders. Currently, his professional focus as a scientist and professor (Brigham Young University) is to better understand the role of elevated insulin and nutrient metabolism in regulating obesity, diabetes, and dementia.

In addition to his academic pursuits, Dr. Bikman is the author of Why We Get Sick and How Not To Get Sick.

Read more
Tsolmon Tsogbayar, MD

Tsolmon Tsogbayar, MD

Health Programs Lead, Health Innovation

Dr. Tsogbayar leverages her clinical expertise to develop innovative health solutions and evidence-based coaching. Dr. Tsogbayar previously practiced as a physician with a comprehensive training background, developing specialized expertise in cardiology and emergency medicine after gaining experience in primary care, allergy & immunology, internal medicine, and general surgery.

She earned her medical degree from Imperial College London, where she also completed her MSc in Human Molecular Genetics after obtaining a BSc in Biochemistry from Queen Mary University of London. Her academic research includes significant work in developmental cardiovascular genetics, with her thesis publication contributing to the understanding of genetic modifications on embryonic cardiovascular development.

Read more
Pavel Korecky, MD

Pavel Korecky, MD

Director of Clinical Product Operations

Director of Clinical Product Operations at SiPhox Health with a background in medicine and a passion for health optimization. Experienced in leading software and clinical development teams, contributing to patents, launching health-related products, and turning diagnostics into actionable tools.

Read more
Tash Milinkovic, MD

Tash Milinkovic, MD

Health Programs Lead, Heart & Metabolic

Dr. Natasha Milinkovic is part of the clinical product team at SiPhox Health, having graduated from the University of Bristol Medical School. Her medical career includes rotations across medical and surgical specialties, with specialized research in vascular surgery, focusing on recovery and post-operative pain outcomes. Dr. Milinkovic built her expertise in emergency medicine as a clinical fellow at a major trauma center before practicing at a central London teaching hospital throughout the pandemic.

She has contributed to global health initiatives, implementing surgical safety standards and protocols across rural Uganda. Dr. Milinkovic initially joined SiPhox Health to spearhead the health coaching initiative and has been a key contributor in the development and launch of the Heart and Metabolic program. She is passionate about addressing health disparities by building scalable healthcare solutions.

Read more
Paul Thompson, MD

Paul Thompson, MD

Advisor, Cardiology

Paul D. Thompson is Chief of Cardiology Emeritus of Hartford Hospital and Professor Emeritus at University of Connecticut Medical School. He has authored over 500 scientific articles on cardiovascular risk factors, the effects of exercise, and beyond. He received National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) Preventive Cardiology Academic Award, and has received NIH funding for multiple studies.

Dr. Thompson’s interests in exercise, general cardiology and sports cardiology originated from his own distance running: he qualified for the 1972 Olympic Marathon Trials as a 3rd year medical student and finished 16th in the 1976 Boston Marathon. Dr. Thompson publishes a blog 500 Rules of Cardiology where he shares lessons and anecdotes that he has learned over his extensive career as a physician, researcher and teacher.

Read more
Robert Lufkin, MD

Robert Lufkin, MD

Advisor, Metabolic Health

Physician/medical school professor (UCLA and USC) and New York Times bestselling author empowering people to take back their metabolic health with lifestyle and other tools. A veteran of the Today Show, USA Today, and a regular contributor to FOX and other network news stations, his weekly video podcast reaches over 500,000 people. After reversing chronic disease and transforming his own life he is making it his mission to help others do the same.

His latest book, ‘Lies I Taught In Medical School’ is an instant New York Times bestseller and has re-framed how we think about metabolic health and longevity. In addition to being a practicing physician, he is author of over 200 peer reviewed scientific papers and 14 books that are available in fourteen languages.

Read more
Ben Bikman, PhD

Ben Bikman, PhD

Advisor, Metabolic Research

Benjamin Bikman earned his Ph.D. in Bioenergetics and was a postdoctoral fellow with the Duke-National University of Singapore in metabolic disorders. Currently, his professional focus as a scientist and professor (Brigham Young University) is to better understand the role of elevated insulin and nutrient metabolism in regulating obesity, diabetes, and dementia.

In addition to his academic pursuits, Dr. Bikman is the author of Why We Get Sick and How Not To Get Sick.

Read more
Tsolmon Tsogbayar, MD

Tsolmon Tsogbayar, MD

Health Programs Lead, Health Innovation

Dr. Tsogbayar leverages her clinical expertise to develop innovative health solutions and evidence-based coaching. Dr. Tsogbayar previously practiced as a physician with a comprehensive training background, developing specialized expertise in cardiology and emergency medicine after gaining experience in primary care, allergy & immunology, internal medicine, and general surgery.

She earned her medical degree from Imperial College London, where she also completed her MSc in Human Molecular Genetics after obtaining a BSc in Biochemistry from Queen Mary University of London. Her academic research includes significant work in developmental cardiovascular genetics, with her thesis publication contributing to the understanding of genetic modifications on embryonic cardiovascular development.

Read more
Pavel Korecky, MD

Pavel Korecky, MD

Director of Clinical Product Operations

Director of Clinical Product Operations at SiPhox Health with a background in medicine and a passion for health optimization. Experienced in leading software and clinical development teams, contributing to patents, launching health-related products, and turning diagnostics into actionable tools.

Read more
Tash Milinkovic, MD

Tash Milinkovic, MD

Health Programs Lead, Heart & Metabolic

Dr. Natasha Milinkovic is part of the clinical product team at SiPhox Health, having graduated from the University of Bristol Medical School. Her medical career includes rotations across medical and surgical specialties, with specialized research in vascular surgery, focusing on recovery and post-operative pain outcomes. Dr. Milinkovic built her expertise in emergency medicine as a clinical fellow at a major trauma center before practicing at a central London teaching hospital throughout the pandemic.

She has contributed to global health initiatives, implementing surgical safety standards and protocols across rural Uganda. Dr. Milinkovic initially joined SiPhox Health to spearhead the health coaching initiative and has been a key contributor in the development and launch of the Heart and Metabolic program. She is passionate about addressing health disparities by building scalable healthcare solutions.

Read more
Paul Thompson, MD

Paul Thompson, MD

Advisor, Cardiology

Paul D. Thompson is Chief of Cardiology Emeritus of Hartford Hospital and Professor Emeritus at University of Connecticut Medical School. He has authored over 500 scientific articles on cardiovascular risk factors, the effects of exercise, and beyond. He received National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) Preventive Cardiology Academic Award, and has received NIH funding for multiple studies.

Dr. Thompson’s interests in exercise, general cardiology and sports cardiology originated from his own distance running: he qualified for the 1972 Olympic Marathon Trials as a 3rd year medical student and finished 16th in the 1976 Boston Marathon. Dr. Thompson publishes a blog 500 Rules of Cardiology where he shares lessons and anecdotes that he has learned over his extensive career as a physician, researcher and teacher.

Read more
Robert Lufkin, MD

Robert Lufkin, MD

Advisor, Metabolic Health

Physician/medical school professor (UCLA and USC) and New York Times bestselling author empowering people to take back their metabolic health with lifestyle and other tools. A veteran of the Today Show, USA Today, and a regular contributor to FOX and other network news stations, his weekly video podcast reaches over 500,000 people. After reversing chronic disease and transforming his own life he is making it his mission to help others do the same.

His latest book, ‘Lies I Taught In Medical School’ is an instant New York Times bestseller and has re-framed how we think about metabolic health and longevity. In addition to being a practicing physician, he is author of over 200 peer reviewed scientific papers and 14 books that are available in fourteen languages.

Read more
Ben Bikman, PhD

Ben Bikman, PhD

Advisor, Metabolic Research

Benjamin Bikman earned his Ph.D. in Bioenergetics and was a postdoctoral fellow with the Duke-National University of Singapore in metabolic disorders. Currently, his professional focus as a scientist and professor (Brigham Young University) is to better understand the role of elevated insulin and nutrient metabolism in regulating obesity, diabetes, and dementia.

In addition to his academic pursuits, Dr. Bikman is the author of Why We Get Sick and How Not To Get Sick.

Read more
Tsolmon Tsogbayar, MD

Tsolmon Tsogbayar, MD

Health Programs Lead, Health Innovation

Dr. Tsogbayar leverages her clinical expertise to develop innovative health solutions and evidence-based coaching. Dr. Tsogbayar previously practiced as a physician with a comprehensive training background, developing specialized expertise in cardiology and emergency medicine after gaining experience in primary care, allergy & immunology, internal medicine, and general surgery.

She earned her medical degree from Imperial College London, where she also completed her MSc in Human Molecular Genetics after obtaining a BSc in Biochemistry from Queen Mary University of London. Her academic research includes significant work in developmental cardiovascular genetics, with her thesis publication contributing to the understanding of genetic modifications on embryonic cardiovascular development.

Read more
Pavel Korecky, MD

Pavel Korecky, MD

Director of Clinical Product Operations

Director of Clinical Product Operations at SiPhox Health with a background in medicine and a passion for health optimization. Experienced in leading software and clinical development teams, contributing to patents, launching health-related products, and turning diagnostics into actionable tools.

Read more
Tash Milinkovic, MD

Tash Milinkovic, MD

Health Programs Lead, Heart & Metabolic

Dr. Natasha Milinkovic is part of the clinical product team at SiPhox Health, having graduated from the University of Bristol Medical School. Her medical career includes rotations across medical and surgical specialties, with specialized research in vascular surgery, focusing on recovery and post-operative pain outcomes. Dr. Milinkovic built her expertise in emergency medicine as a clinical fellow at a major trauma center before practicing at a central London teaching hospital throughout the pandemic.

She has contributed to global health initiatives, implementing surgical safety standards and protocols across rural Uganda. Dr. Milinkovic initially joined SiPhox Health to spearhead the health coaching initiative and has been a key contributor in the development and launch of the Heart and Metabolic program. She is passionate about addressing health disparities by building scalable healthcare solutions.

Read more
Paul Thompson, MD

Paul Thompson, MD

Advisor, Cardiology

Paul D. Thompson is Chief of Cardiology Emeritus of Hartford Hospital and Professor Emeritus at University of Connecticut Medical School. He has authored over 500 scientific articles on cardiovascular risk factors, the effects of exercise, and beyond. He received National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) Preventive Cardiology Academic Award, and has received NIH funding for multiple studies.

Dr. Thompson’s interests in exercise, general cardiology and sports cardiology originated from his own distance running: he qualified for the 1972 Olympic Marathon Trials as a 3rd year medical student and finished 16th in the 1976 Boston Marathon. Dr. Thompson publishes a blog 500 Rules of Cardiology where he shares lessons and anecdotes that he has learned over his extensive career as a physician, researcher and teacher.

Read more
Robert Lufkin, MD

Robert Lufkin, MD

Advisor, Metabolic Health

Physician/medical school professor (UCLA and USC) and New York Times bestselling author empowering people to take back their metabolic health with lifestyle and other tools. A veteran of the Today Show, USA Today, and a regular contributor to FOX and other network news stations, his weekly video podcast reaches over 500,000 people. After reversing chronic disease and transforming his own life he is making it his mission to help others do the same.

His latest book, ‘Lies I Taught In Medical School’ is an instant New York Times bestseller and has re-framed how we think about metabolic health and longevity. In addition to being a practicing physician, he is author of over 200 peer reviewed scientific papers and 14 books that are available in fourteen languages.

Read more
Ben Bikman, PhD

Ben Bikman, PhD

Advisor, Metabolic Research

Benjamin Bikman earned his Ph.D. in Bioenergetics and was a postdoctoral fellow with the Duke-National University of Singapore in metabolic disorders. Currently, his professional focus as a scientist and professor (Brigham Young University) is to better understand the role of elevated insulin and nutrient metabolism in regulating obesity, diabetes, and dementia.

In addition to his academic pursuits, Dr. Bikman is the author of Why We Get Sick and How Not To Get Sick.

Read more
Tsolmon Tsogbayar, MD

Tsolmon Tsogbayar, MD

Health Programs Lead, Health Innovation

Dr. Tsogbayar leverages her clinical expertise to develop innovative health solutions and evidence-based coaching. Dr. Tsogbayar previously practiced as a physician with a comprehensive training background, developing specialized expertise in cardiology and emergency medicine after gaining experience in primary care, allergy & immunology, internal medicine, and general surgery.

She earned her medical degree from Imperial College London, where she also completed her MSc in Human Molecular Genetics after obtaining a BSc in Biochemistry from Queen Mary University of London. Her academic research includes significant work in developmental cardiovascular genetics, with her thesis publication contributing to the understanding of genetic modifications on embryonic cardiovascular development.

Read more
Pavel Korecky, MD

Pavel Korecky, MD

Director of Clinical Product Operations

Director of Clinical Product Operations at SiPhox Health with a background in medicine and a passion for health optimization. Experienced in leading software and clinical development teams, contributing to patents, launching health-related products, and turning diagnostics into actionable tools.

Read more
Tash Milinkovic, MD

Tash Milinkovic, MD

Health Programs Lead, Heart & Metabolic

Dr. Natasha Milinkovic is part of the clinical product team at SiPhox Health, having graduated from the University of Bristol Medical School. Her medical career includes rotations across medical and surgical specialties, with specialized research in vascular surgery, focusing on recovery and post-operative pain outcomes. Dr. Milinkovic built her expertise in emergency medicine as a clinical fellow at a major trauma center before practicing at a central London teaching hospital throughout the pandemic.

She has contributed to global health initiatives, implementing surgical safety standards and protocols across rural Uganda. Dr. Milinkovic initially joined SiPhox Health to spearhead the health coaching initiative and has been a key contributor in the development and launch of the Heart and Metabolic program. She is passionate about addressing health disparities by building scalable healthcare solutions.

Read more
Paul Thompson, MD

Paul Thompson, MD

Advisor, Cardiology

Paul D. Thompson is Chief of Cardiology Emeritus of Hartford Hospital and Professor Emeritus at University of Connecticut Medical School. He has authored over 500 scientific articles on cardiovascular risk factors, the effects of exercise, and beyond. He received National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) Preventive Cardiology Academic Award, and has received NIH funding for multiple studies.

Dr. Thompson’s interests in exercise, general cardiology and sports cardiology originated from his own distance running: he qualified for the 1972 Olympic Marathon Trials as a 3rd year medical student and finished 16th in the 1976 Boston Marathon. Dr. Thompson publishes a blog 500 Rules of Cardiology where he shares lessons and anecdotes that he has learned over his extensive career as a physician, researcher and teacher.

Read more
Robert Lufkin, MD

Robert Lufkin, MD

Advisor, Metabolic Health

Physician/medical school professor (UCLA and USC) and New York Times bestselling author empowering people to take back their metabolic health with lifestyle and other tools. A veteran of the Today Show, USA Today, and a regular contributor to FOX and other network news stations, his weekly video podcast reaches over 500,000 people. After reversing chronic disease and transforming his own life he is making it his mission to help others do the same.

His latest book, ‘Lies I Taught In Medical School’ is an instant New York Times bestseller and has re-framed how we think about metabolic health and longevity. In addition to being a practicing physician, he is author of over 200 peer reviewed scientific papers and 14 books that are available in fourteen languages.

Read more
Ben Bikman, PhD

Ben Bikman, PhD

Advisor, Metabolic Research

Benjamin Bikman earned his Ph.D. in Bioenergetics and was a postdoctoral fellow with the Duke-National University of Singapore in metabolic disorders. Currently, his professional focus as a scientist and professor (Brigham Young University) is to better understand the role of elevated insulin and nutrient metabolism in regulating obesity, diabetes, and dementia.

In addition to his academic pursuits, Dr. Bikman is the author of Why We Get Sick and How Not To Get Sick.

Read more

Our mission is to empower everyday people to test their blood biomarkers painlessly at home and live healthier, longer.

Company
SiPhox, Inc.
111 Terrace Hall Avenue, Burlington
MA 01803 US

The reference ranges and insights presented in the SiPhox Health dashboard are meant to improve readability and provide context, however you should consult with your physician for a more formal interpretation of your results. No communication from SiPhox Health is meant to be or should be taken as medical advice. SiPhox Health is a wellness-only service and is not designed to diagnose, prevent, or treat any disease. If you are concerned about any of the data in your dashboard please consult your physician immediately.

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