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See what your bloodwork actually says.

Up to 85 biomarkers across 15 health systems, reviewed by our internal medicine specialist. One blood draw at a Canadian lab. Results back in about a week.

Trace the fatigue, weight shifts, brain fog, low drive, or sleep changes back to the systems actually moving behind them.

Every panel is reviewed by our internal medicine specialist, not algorithm-scored against a generic reference range.

One blood draw at a Canadian partner lab in your province. No GP gatekeeper, no specialist queue.

Heavy metals, mycotoxin, genetics, food sensitivity — available à la carte when you want to look deeper than a standard panel.

Pick your panel.

Check, Essential, or Comprehensive — same lab, same specialist, different depth.

Check
FROM $50

Check

3–5 markers · one system

Best for retesting on a protocol, or confirming one system you already think is off.

  • For men: Testosterone, Growth Hormone, Thyroid, Adrenal, or Metabolic.
  • For women: Estrogen, Testosterone, Thyroid, Fertility, or Metabolic.
  • Specialist-read — same review as the higher tiers.
  • Drawn at any Dynacare or LifeLabs in your province.
  • Results back in about a week.
  • Bloodwork credit applies if you upgrade into treatment.

$50–$100

Essential

Essential

~20 markers · broad look

Best for a yearly look at how your body's doing — or your first proper blood panel.

  • Reproductive hormones — Total T, Free T, SHBG, Estradiol, LH, FSH, Prolactin. For women: adds Progesterone.
  • Adrenal & thyroid — TSH, Free T4, Free T3, DHEA-S. For men: adds Cortisol AM.
  • Metabolic & blood sugar — Fasting Glucose, Fasting Insulin, HbA1c.
  • Heart health — for men only: Total Cholesterol, LDL, HDL, Triglycerides.
  • Inflammation & key nutrients — hs-CRP and Vitamin D. For women: adds Ferritin and a CBC with differential.

$299

See what’s actually moving.

Patterns across hormones, metabolism, thyroid, and inflammation, traced to what’s behind them.

A plan, not just a panel.

Every panel is read by our internal medicine specialist, who writes the supplement, lifestyle, and follow-up next steps that fit your specific results.

Read the result, not just the number.

  • What this number means at your level
  • Why it moves and what moves with it
  • What it tells you, and what it doesn't

Today’s panel, next year’s baseline.

Most buyers run this once a year as a baseline. If your results show treatment would help, your bloodwork credit applies to a Gambit protocol when you start one.

What we test.

85 biomarkers across 15 health systems. Every marker, what it measures, and which panel it sits on.

Panel inclusion:
  • Check
  • Essential
  • Comprehensive
  • Add-on

11 markers

Sex and Reproductive Hormones

The hormones that drive energy, body composition, mood, libido, fertility, and how you sleep.

Total Testosterone

Measures the total amount of testosterone in your blood, including the fractions bound to proteins and the unbound fraction. The standard read on testosterone production.

Free Testosterone

The fraction of testosterone not bound to SHBG, distinct from the total testosterone read. Free testosterone reflects the portion most readily available to tissues and can be useful when SHBG is high or low enough to make the total testosterone number misleading on its own.

SHBG (Sex Hormone Binding Globulin)

The protein that binds testosterone in circulation and regulates how much is biologically available. High SHBG can mean total testosterone reads normal while free testosterone runs low.

Estradiol (E2)

The primary form of estrogen in circulation, present in both men and women. In men it reflects how much testosterone is being converted to estrogen; in women it tracks ovarian function across the cycle and into menopause.

Progesterone

A reproductive hormone that rises in the second half of the menstrual cycle and is required for cycle regularity and early pregnancy. Levels also reflect ovulation status and luteal-phase function.

LH (Luteinizing Hormone)

A pituitary hormone that signals the gonads to produce sex hormones. In men it reflects the brain's drive on testicular function; in women it triggers ovulation and tracks reproductive-stage shifts.

FSH (Follicle-Stimulating Hormone)

The other pituitary signal to the gonads, paired with LH on most reproductive panels. Levels indicate egg-reserve status in women and testicular function in men.

Prolactin

A pituitary hormone elevated by stress, certain medications, and prolactinomas. High prolactin can suppress testosterone in men and disrupt cycles in women, so it sits on every reproductive panel.

DHEA-S

An adrenal hormone that serves as a precursor to both testosterone and estrogen. Levels reflect overall adrenal output and tend to decline steadily with age.

Androstenedione

An adrenal and gonadal precursor that converts into both testosterone and estrogen. Particularly informative on women's panels where it tracks PCOS-pattern androgen excess.

AMH (Anti-Müllerian Hormone)

A marker of ovarian reserve, reflecting the size of the resting follicle pool. AMH levels are relatively stable across the menstrual cycle, which makes it a useful complement to FSH and estradiol on a reproductive panel, particularly in the context of fertility evaluation.

4 markers

Metabolic Health and Blood Sugar

How your body is handling sugar and insulin — the upstream signal that can shift before fasting glucose alone moves out of range.

Fasting Glucose

Measures the level of glucose in your blood after an overnight fast. The standard screen for diabetes and prediabetes, though it tends to move late in the progression of insulin resistance.

Fasting Insulin

Measures the amount of insulin your pancreas is producing at rest. Fasting insulin can rise well before fasting glucose moves out of range, so it is associated with early shifts in insulin sensitivity that a glucose-only screen would miss.

HbA1c (Hemoglobin A1c)

Reflects average blood-sugar levels over the prior three months by measuring the percentage of hemoglobin that has bound glucose. A more stable read than a single fasting glucose draw.

HOMA-IR (Insulin Resistance calculation)

A calculation derived from fasting glucose and fasting insulin that estimates the degree of insulin resistance at rest. HOMA-IR can shift before fasting glucose alone moves out of range and is read alongside the other metabolic markers on the panel rather than on its own.

8 markers

Heart Health and Cardiovascular Risk

Lipids, plaque-forming particles, vascular inflammation, and the homocysteine read most standard panels skip.

Total Cholesterol

The combined level of all cholesterol fractions in your blood. A starting read on cardiovascular profile, though the breakdown into LDL, HDL, and triglycerides carries more interpretive weight than the total alone.

LDL Cholesterol

Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol — the fraction associated with plaque buildup in artery walls. The standard read on atherogenic cholesterol, paired with ApoB on a comprehensive panel for greater specificity.

HDL Cholesterol

High-density lipoprotein cholesterol — the fraction that transports cholesterol back to the liver for clearance. Higher levels are associated with lower cardiovascular risk.

Triglycerides

A type of fat in the blood that rises with carbohydrate intake, alcohol, and insulin resistance. Elevated triglycerides are associated with metabolic dysfunction and cardiovascular risk.

Complete Lipid Panel

The full lipid set drawn from a single sample — total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, and triglycerides — reported together with the calculated ratios labs derive from them.

ApoB (Apolipoprotein B)

Measures the count of plaque-forming particles in your blood directly, rather than the cholesterol cargo they carry. ApoB is considered one of the more specific markers of atherogenic cardiovascular risk and is increasingly recommended in addition to a standard lipid panel.

hs-CRP (high-sensitivity C-Reactive Protein)

A high-sensitivity measure of low-grade systemic inflammation. Persistently elevated hs-CRP is associated with cardiovascular risk independent of cholesterol levels.

Homocysteine

An amino acid that accumulates when B-vitamin metabolism is impaired. Elevated levels are associated with vascular inflammation and cardiovascular risk and often track back to low B12 or folate.

5 markers

Thyroid Function

The system that sets your metabolism, your energy floor, your body temperature, and your mood baseline.

TSH (Thyroid Stimulating Hormone)

A pituitary hormone that signals the thyroid to produce T4 and T3. The standard first-line thyroid screen, though TSH alone can sit inside the reference range while downstream thyroid hormones run out of yours.

Free T4

The unbound, biologically available form of thyroxine — the main hormone the thyroid produces. Levels indicate how much T4 is actually circulating and available to tissues for conversion to active T3.

Free T3

The unbound, biologically active form of triiodothyronine — the thyroid hormone that does the work at the cellular level. Often runs low in cases of impaired T4-to-T3 conversion.

Reverse T3

An inactive isomer of T3 produced under stress, illness, or caloric restriction. Elevated reverse T3 is associated with situations where T4-to-T3 conversion shifts toward the inactive form, and is read alongside Free T3 and Free T4 on a comprehensive thyroid panel.

TPO Antibodies

Antibodies against thyroid peroxidase, the enzyme involved in thyroid hormone production. Elevated TPO antibodies are associated with autoimmune thyroid conditions, including Hashimoto's thyroiditis, and can be present years before standard thyroid markers shift.

3 markers

Adrenal and Stress Response

The HPA axis — what your cortisol rhythm has actually been doing while you weren't looking.

Cortisol AM

Measures cortisol levels drawn in the early morning, when they should be at their daily peak. The standard read on adrenal output and a baseline for diagnosing high-cortisol or low-cortisol patterns.

DHEA-S

The other primary adrenal hormone, often read alongside morning cortisol to map the adrenal output ratio. Tends to decline with age and with sustained HPA-axis activation.

ACTH (Adrenocorticotropic Hormone)

The pituitary hormone that signals the adrenal glands to produce cortisol. Reading ACTH alongside cortisol can indicate whether a cortisol abnormality originates in the adrenal glands or upstream in the pituitary.

2 markers

Growth and Recovery

The markers tied to lean mass, tissue repair, sleep quality, and how well your body bounces back.

hGH (Human Growth Hormone)

The pituitary hormone that supports tissue repair, lean mass, and the deeper stages of sleep. hGH is pulsatile and difficult to interpret from a single draw, so it is typically read alongside IGF-1.

IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1)

A liver-produced hormone that reflects integrated growth-hormone activity over the prior several days. Considered the more stable read on growth-hormone status and tends to decline gradually from the late twenties forward.

5 markers

Vitamins and Nutrients

The deficiencies that quietly drive fatigue, mood dips, brain fog, and poor sleep before anything else moves.

Vitamin D

Measures 25-hydroxyvitamin D, the storage form that reflects overall vitamin D status. Low levels are associated with fatigue, mood changes, bone-density loss, and immune dysfunction, and are common in Canadian climates.

Vitamin B12

A water-soluble vitamin required for red blood cell formation, neurological function, and energy metabolism. Low B12 is associated with fatigue, cognitive symptoms, and a specific pattern of anemia.

Folate

A B-vitamin required for DNA synthesis, red blood cell production, and homocysteine metabolism. Often read alongside B12 because the two work together and deficiency in either produces similar symptoms.

Magnesium

A mineral involved in over three hundred enzymatic reactions, including muscle function, nerve signalling, and sleep regulation. Low magnesium is associated with cramps, poor sleep, anxiety symptoms, and elevated blood pressure.

Zinc

A trace mineral involved in immune function, wound healing, testosterone production, and taste perception. Zinc deficiency is associated with frequent infections, slow healing, and hormone disruption in men.

5 markers

Liver Health

The enzymes that reflect fatty-liver load, alcohol impact, and how your liver is handling daily medication.

ALT (Alanine Aminotransferase)

An enzyme released into the bloodstream when liver cells are damaged or stressed. Elevated ALT is associated with fatty liver disease, viral hepatitis, alcohol load, and medication effects.

AST (Aspartate Aminotransferase)

A liver enzyme also found in muscle, often read alongside ALT to interpret the source and pattern of liver stress. The AST-to-ALT ratio can suggest specific underlying causes.

ALP (Alkaline Phosphatase)

An enzyme produced primarily in the liver and bone. Elevated levels can suggest bile-duct issues, certain liver conditions, or bone turnover, depending on the clinical context.

GGT (Gamma-Glutamyl Transferase)

A liver enzyme sensitive to alcohol intake and biliary-tract stress. Elevated GGT alongside elevated ALP suggests a bile-flow problem; elevated GGT alone often reflects alcohol load or oxidative stress.

Liver Enzymes Panel

The bundled enzyme set — ALT, AST, ALP, GGT — reported together from a single sample. Reading them as a pattern carries more interpretive weight than any single enzyme on its own.

3 markers

Kidney and Organ Function

Filtration capacity and the full metabolic panel — the foundation read on how your organs are actually doing.

eGFR (Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate)

A calculation from blood creatinine that estimates how well your kidneys are filtering. The standard read on kidney function and a baseline that influences how other markers are interpreted.

Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP)

A bundled panel measuring glucose, electrolytes, calcium, kidney filtration markers, liver enzymes, and protein balance. A broad organ-system foundation read most other panels are interpreted against.

Kidney Function Panel

The bundled kidney-specific subset — creatinine, eGFR, BUN, and electrolyte balance — reported together. Measures both filtration capacity and the downstream electrolyte regulation the kidneys manage.

3 markers

Blood Health and Iron Status

Anemia, oxygen delivery, immune cell counts, and the iron stores that drive endurance and recovery.

CBC (Complete Blood Count) with differential

A bundled panel measuring red blood cells, white blood cells across their five subtypes, platelets, and red cell size and shape. Captures oxygen-carrying capacity and the immune cell baseline in one draw.

Ferritin

The protein that stores iron in your body. Ferritin reflects total iron stores and can run low for months before standard hemoglobin reads as anemic — associated with fatigue, hair shedding, and reduced exercise tolerance.

Iron

Measures the amount of iron currently in circulation, distinct from the stored iron ferritin tracks. Read together with ferritin and CBC, the three markers separate functional iron deficiency from depleted iron stores.

4 markers

Preventative Genetics

One-time genetic risk reads — done once, never need to be repeated.

Hereditary Cancer Risk Panel

A genetic panel testing for inherited variants associated with elevated lifetime risk of specific cancers, including variants in BRCA1, BRCA2, and Lynch syndrome genes. Results inform how cancer surveillance is approached over time and complement standard blood-marker testing.

Cardiovascular Genetics

A panel testing for inherited variants associated with familial hypercholesterolemia and other genetic patterns of cardiovascular risk. Results inform how cardiovascular markers are monitored and interpreted over time.

Hereditary Arrhythmia Panel

A genetic panel covering variants associated with inherited heart-rhythm conditions such as long QT syndrome. Particularly relevant when there is a family history of unexplained cardiac events.

Metabolic Condition Screening

A genetic panel screening for inherited susceptibility to metabolic conditions including type 2 diabetes and obesity-related variants. Provides a baseline risk read that complements metabolic blood markers.

3 markers

Food Sensitivity Testing

Immune-mediated reactions to foods — distinct from true allergies, harder to spot without testing.

IgE Food Allergy Panel

Measures IgE antibodies — the immune class responsible for immediate, classical allergic reactions to specific foods. The standard test for diagnosing true food allergies.

IgG Food Sensitivity Panel

Measures IgG antibodies against a panel of common foods. Some clinicians use IgG patterns alongside elimination-diet observations to evaluate delayed-onset food reactions; the framework is not universally accepted and IgG is offered as part of a broader workup rather than a stand-alone diagnostic test.

IgG4 Food Reactivity Panel

Measures IgG4 antibodies — a specific subclass associated with chronic food exposure patterns and longer-term immune tolerance. Read alongside the IgG panel for a fuller food-reactivity picture.

12 markers

Heavy Metals

Toxic metal exposure from your environment, your work, your water, or your diet.

Lead (Pb)

Measures lead exposure, which accumulates in soft tissue and bone over years. Associated with fatigue, cognitive symptoms, hypertension, and developmental concerns; common exposure routes include older plumbing, occupational dust, and imported pottery.

Mercury (Hg)

Measures mercury exposure from dietary sources (predominantly large fish) and occupational contact. Elevated mercury is associated with neurological symptoms, fatigue, and immune dysregulation.

Arsenic (As)

Measures arsenic exposure from contaminated water, certain foods (notably rice), and industrial sources. Chronic long-term exposure is associated with cardiovascular effects, skin changes, and increased risk of some forms of cancer.

Cadmium (Cd)

Measures cadmium exposure from tobacco smoke, industrial sources, and certain foods. Cadmium accumulates in the kidneys and is associated with renal stress and bone density loss.

Aluminum (Al)

Measures aluminum exposure from cookware, antiperspirants, certain medications, and industrial sources. Elevated levels are associated with neurological symptoms and kidney-clearance issues.

Antimony (Sb)

Measures antimony exposure, most often from industrial contact and certain consumer products. Elevated levels are associated with respiratory and cardiovascular effects.

Barium (Ba)

Measures barium exposure, typically from industrial sources or contaminated water. Chronic exposure is associated with cardiovascular and gastrointestinal effects.

Beryllium (Be)

Measures beryllium exposure, most commonly occupational from aerospace, electronics, and metalworking industries. Associated with chronic lung disease in exposed workers.

Bismuth (Bi)

Measures bismuth levels, most often elevated from chronic use of bismuth-containing medications. Elevated bismuth is associated with neurological symptoms in sustained-exposure cases.

Nickel (Ni)

Measures nickel exposure, common from jewellery, industrial contact, and certain foods. Associated with contact-dermatitis patterns and chronic inflammation in sensitized individuals.

Thallium (Tl)

Measures thallium exposure, rare in routine settings but possible from industrial sources or environmental contamination. Associated with neurological symptoms, hair loss, and gastrointestinal effects.

Uranium (U)

Measures uranium exposure, typically from contaminated water in specific regions or occupational contact. Chronic exposure is associated with kidney effects.

18 markers

Environmental and Mold

Biotoxin exposure and the inflammatory pattern that can follow — the marker set used in suspected chronic inflammatory response cases.

TGF-β1 (Transforming Growth Factor Beta 1)

A cytokine elevated in chronic inflammatory states, including biotoxin-driven illness. One of three first-line CIRS markers used to indicate ongoing inflammatory activation.

MMP-9 (Matrix Metalloproteinase 9)

An enzyme released during inflammatory tissue remodelling, elevated in many CIRS cases. Associated with the vascular inflammation pattern that drives many of the chronic symptoms.

MSH (Melanocyte-Stimulating Hormone)

A regulatory hormone that runs low in chronic biotoxin exposure. Low MSH is associated with sleep disruption, gut symptoms, and immune dysregulation.

C4a (Complement Component 4a)

A complement-system fragment released during immune activation. Elevated C4a is associated with the inflammatory pattern of biotoxin-driven illness and tracks symptom activity.

VEGF (Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor)

A signaling protein involved in vascular function and oxygen delivery. Abnormal VEGF — often low — is one of the markers described in evaluation frameworks for biotoxin-related illness, read alongside the other inflammatory markers on the panel.

ACTH (Adrenocorticotropic Hormone)

The pituitary signal driving cortisol production, read in the CIRS context alongside cortisol to interpret HPA-axis disruption that often accompanies biotoxin illness.

Cortisol (basal/diurnal)

A second cortisol read in the CIRS workup, used together with ACTH to capture rhythm patterns rather than a single morning level.

ADH (Antidiuretic Hormone)

A pituitary hormone that regulates fluid balance, often dysregulated in CIRS. Abnormal ADH is associated with the thirst, frequent urination, and electrolyte patterns common in biotoxin illness.

Osmolality

Measures the concentration of solutes in your blood, used alongside ADH to interpret fluid and electrolyte regulation in CIRS cases.

Leptin

A hormone that signals satiety and energy balance. Often elevated in CIRS and associated with the weight-regulation difficulties many patients report.

DHEA-S (CIRS context)

A second read on DHEA-S in the CIRS workup, used to capture HPA-axis impact in cases where adrenal function appears affected by sustained biotoxin exposure.

Ferritin (CIRS context)

A second read on ferritin in the CIRS workup. Ferritin can run high as an acute-phase reactant in chronic inflammation, distinct from its more familiar role tracking iron stores.

Vitamin D (CIRS context)

A second read on vitamin D in the CIRS workup. Low vitamin D is associated with the immune dysregulation pattern seen in many biotoxin-illness cases.

Zinc (CIRS context)

A second read on zinc in the CIRS workup. Zinc status often shifts with chronic immune activation and tracks alongside the other inflammation markers.

Antigliadin IgA

An antibody against gliadin, a wheat protein. Used in the CIRS context to identify gluten-driven immune activation that can overlap with biotoxin symptoms.

Antigliadin IgM

A complementary antibody against gliadin in a different immune class, read alongside Antigliadin IgA to capture both recent and longer-standing gluten-related immune activity.

HLA-DR/DQ

A genetic typing of immune-system surface markers associated with susceptibility to chronic biotoxin illness. Identifies the inherited HLA patterns linked to reduced biotoxin clearance.

Mycotoxin Testing

A specialty test quantifying specific mycotoxins — the toxic compounds produced by mold — in serum or urine. Available as either a serum send-out or an at-home urine kit covering eleven distinct mycotoxins.

5 markers

Tick-Borne and Lyme

Borrelia exposure and the immune response that follows it — for suspected tick-borne illness.

Borrelia IgM

Measures IgM antibodies against Borrelia, the bacterial genus that includes the species causing Lyme disease. IgM antibodies are associated with more recent immune activation; results are interpreted alongside clinical context because IgM can cross-react with other exposures.

Borrelia IgG

Measures IgG antibodies against Borrelia, the immune class that develops later and persists. IgG is associated with longer-standing exposure or established infection.

C3a (Complement Component 3a)

A complement fragment released during immune activation, read in the Lyme workup as part of the inflammatory-response signature. Elevated C3a is associated with ongoing immune activity.

C4a (Complement Component 4a)

A second complement fragment read alongside C3a in the Lyme workup. The C3a/C4a pattern helps characterize the inflammatory pattern in suspected chronic tick-borne illness.

CD57

A surface marker on a subset of natural killer cells. Some clinicians evaluating suspected long-standing tick-borne illness include CD57 alongside other immune markers; the interpretive framework is not universally accepted and CD57 is offered here as part of a broader workup rather than as a stand-alone test.

How it works.

01

Choose your panel

Pick Check, Essential, or Comprehensive based on how deep you want to look. Add specialty tests à la carte.

02

Tell us about you

A short health questionnaire so our specialist can flag anything worth a closer look and tailor your interpretation.

03

Prep for your draw

We’ll email your lab requisition with detailed prep — including the supplements to pause and the fasting window (10–12 hours, water only).

04

One blood draw, near you

Walk into any Dynacare or LifeLabs draw site. No referral, no GP appointment. Show your requisition and you are done.

05

Personalized results in 5–7 business days

See your scores, optimal ranges, and clear next steps in your dashboard. If your data shows treatment would help, your bloodwork credit applies toward a Gambit protocol with our specialist.

More than just numbers.

Every result comes with context, meaning, and the next step to take — read by our internal medicine specialist.

Optimal ranges, not just normal.

Every marker plotted against the range high performers actually live in — not the range that just keeps a GP from calling you.

Clear next steps for your life.

Specific guidance on training, sleep, nutrition, stress, and supplementation — pulled from your data, not a generic protocol.

Treatment, if your data calls for it.

If your results show treatment would help, our specialist can build a Gambit protocol — and your bloodwork credit applies. If not, you have a roadmap.

Your results, on hand.

Open your Gambit dashboard whenever you want. Re-test down the road and watch the trends — every panel adds to your record.

The Gambit difference.

We're not another lab booking site. Here's what makes us different.

  • Our top internal medicine specialist, every panel
  • Built for optimization, not just diagnosis
  • Built for Canadian biology
  • Bloodwork that bridges to treatment
Start assessment

Specialized testing

Go deeper when you're ready.

Specialty panels — environmental, genetic, food sensitivity, single markers — that stack onto any tier. Add at checkout, or come back for them later.

Heavy Metals

Heavy Metals

4 or 12 markers · Starter or Complete

Trace exposure to lead, mercury, arsenic, cadmium — and the rarer metals if you want the full picture.

  • Starter (4 markers): lead, mercury, arsenic, cadmium — the metals most often picked up from old plumbing, dental fillings, fish, or industrial work.
  • Complete (12 markers): adds aluminum, antimony, barium, beryllium, bismuth, nickel, thallium, uranium — the rarer metals worth screening if you've had occupational exposure or want a wider sweep.
  • Useful when you've lived in older housing, worked construction or industrial roles, eaten fish frequently, or want to rule out toxic exposure as part of a fatigue or cognitive workup.
  • Read alongside your tier panel, so the specialist can see how exposure correlates with hormones, kidney function, and inflammation.

Contact us for pricing details.

Environmental / Mold (CIRS)

Environmental / Mold (CIRS)

3, 10, or 17 markers · Starter, CIRS, or Complete

The inflammatory and immune markers used in workups for mold and biotoxin exposure.

  • Starter (3 markers): TGF-β1, MMP-9, MSH — the three core inflammatory and regulatory markers commonly run as the first biotoxin screen.
  • CIRS panel (10 markers): adds C4a, VEGF, ACTH, Cortisol, ADH, Osmolality, Leptin — the broader inflammatory and hormonal markers used in fuller workups.
  • Complete (17 markers): adds DHEA-S, Ferritin, Vitamin D, Zinc, Antigliadin IgA/IgM, HLA-DR/DQ — genetic-susceptibility and nutrient markers for the most extensive evaluation.
  • Worth considering if you've had unexplained fatigue, cognitive symptoms, or inflammatory complaints after exposure to a water-damaged building.
  • Read in context with your hormones, thyroid, and nutrient panel — a single inflammation marker rarely tells the full story on its own.

Contact us for pricing details.

Mycotoxin Testing

Mycotoxin Testing

7–16 molds (serum) or 11 mycotoxins (urine kit)

Two formats for mycotoxin exposure — a serum panel measuring your immune response, or an at-home urine kit measuring the mycotoxins directly.

  • Serum panel: drawn at Dynacare or In Common Laboratories in BC, ON, or QC. Measures IgE, IgG, and IgA antibody responses to 7–16 different mold species, plus Total IgA and Total IgM.
  • At-home urine kit: shipped to your door, sample mailed back. Quantifies 11 mycotoxins directly — Aflatoxin M1, Ochratoxin A, Zearalenone, Trichothecenes, Gliotoxin, Mycophenolic Acid, Citrinin, and others.
  • Useful when you've had repeated exposure to a water-damaged environment, persistent unexplained inflammatory symptoms, or you want the antibody and metabolite picture instead of just one.
  • Turnaround is longer than the standard tier panels — typically a few weeks rather than about a week — because samples route through specialty labs.

Contact us for pricing details.

Lyme Disease

Lyme Disease

2 or 5 markers · Starter or Complete

Borrelia antibodies and immune-response markers used to evaluate suspected Lyme exposure.

  • Starter (2 markers): Borrelia IgM and Borrelia IgG — the standard antibody pair clinicians use as a first Lyme screen.
  • Complete (5 markers): adds C3a, C4a, and CD57 — immune-response markers some clinicians use when symptoms persist or to evaluate immune involvement.
  • Useful if you've had a known tick bite, a suspicious rash, or unexplained joint, neurological, or fatigue symptoms after time outdoors.
  • Antibody results are interpreted alongside symptom history and exposure context — bloodwork alone doesn't confirm a Lyme diagnosis.

Contact us for pricing details.

Preventative Genetics

Preventative Genetics

4 panels · one-time test, results stay with you

Genetic risk screens for hereditary cancer, cardiovascular, arrhythmia, and metabolic conditions — read once, valid for life.

  • Hereditary Cancer Risk Panel — screens variants in genes linked to inherited breast, ovarian, colorectal, prostate, pancreatic, and related cancer risk.
  • Cardiovascular Genetics — variants tied to familial high cholesterol, early-onset heart disease, and inherited vascular risk.
  • Hereditary Arrhythmia Testing — variants linked to inherited rhythm disorders, including long QT and related conditions where family history matters.
  • Metabolic Condition Screening — variants affecting how your body processes nutrients, manages blood sugar, and responds to common medications.
  • Run once, kept on file. The information is permanent — useful for your own planning and for family members who share your genetics.

Contact us for pricing details.

Food Sensitivity Testing (FST)

Food Sensitivity Testing (FST)

3 panels · IgE, IgG, IgG4

Three antibody panels for food reactions — IgE for true allergies, IgG and IgG4 for delayed-response patterns.

  • IgE Food Allergy Panel — true allergies. Measures the antibody class responsible for anaphylaxis-grade reactions, hives, immediate respiratory and skin symptoms.
  • IgG Food Sensitivity Panel — measures delayed-pattern antibody responses to foods. Used by some clinicians as input to elimination-diet protocols; not accepted as diagnostic by all guidelines.
  • IgG4 Food Reactivity Panel — a more specific antibody subclass. Sometimes preferred over the broader IgG panel for reactivity-pattern interpretation.
  • Useful if you've had immediate allergic reactions to identify (IgE), or you're working with a clinician on an elimination diet and want a starting framework (IgG / IgG4).
  • Interpretation matters — antibody results read against your symptom history and dietary context, not as a standalone diet prescription.

Contact us for pricing details.

Single-Marker Add-Ons

Single-Marker Add-Ons

Pick the markers your tier didn't cover

Top up your tier with one or two specific markers — for buyers who want one thing they didn't get.

  • Common picks: Vitamin D, Magnesium, Cortisol AM, eGFR — the markers buyers most often want added to a tier that doesn't include them.
  • Sexual-health cardio-risk pack — hs-CRP, Homocysteine, and ApoB grouped as a single add-on for buyers whose tier didn't include all three.
  • Useful when you have a specific number you want to track — like Vitamin D for energy, Magnesium for sleep, or ApoB for cardiovascular risk.
  • Drawn at the same appointment as your tier panel — no extra blood draw, no extra trip to the lab.
  • Priced individually at checkout. Some single markers run $50 or less; specialty markers cost more — see the per-marker price when you add it.

Contact us for pricing details.

Real patients. Real results.

4.9 100+ Google reviews
To be honest, I thought It was expensive at first, but I realized later on after my 90 day mark that it was worth every penny I paid for I've definitely put a few of my friends on and they're also doing amazing.
Alex Lao

Alex Lao

Mar 9, 2026

Google
Great experience at Gambit Medical Clinic. The team is professional, knowledgeable, and you truly feel supported by a team who take the time to listen and provide quality care. The clinic is accessible 7 days a week, and being able to get a specialist review within 24-48 hours instead of waiting months makes a huge difference. Highly recommend
Larry Waston

Larry Waston

Mar 8, 2026

Google
Customer service is awsome, for the price I pay it's honestly extremely worth it. I've been getting 24/7 support whenever I need it. Even tho I'm younger I never knew how much I was lacking in my health, they have honestly changed my life and the expertise and medical knowledge they have surpass any doctor I have ever worked with. If you have brain fog and your tired and you don't know what's up, you have to contact getgambit and get the comprehensive assessment done, you'll learn a lot about your body that you've never known before
Yusuf Rawi

Yusuf Rawi

Mar 5, 2026

Google
Great experience with Get Gambit Clinic. The team is professional, friendly, and very helpful. Everything was smooth and easy from start to finish. I've even added my wife to the program because of how good the experience has been. Highly recommend.
Rod Keegan

Rod Keegan

Mar 5, 2026

Google
Gambit was amazing , it definitely changed my life. At first to be honest I thought I was paying too much until I started treatment. I was getting checked in on frequently. I had all my inquiries and calls answered with in 24 hours even on weekends. I had amazing check up time with proper care and proper explanation of my blood work. The quality of care is honestly very different from the clinic I came from and it's the best I have seen.
Jesse Roland

Jesse Roland

Mar 4, 2026

Google
Very professional team and great service. They take the time to explain everything and make sure you're taken care of. Really happy with my experience
Ahmed elnggar

Ahmed elnggar

Mar 3, 2026

Google
Great experience overall. The team at Get Gambit was professional, knowledgeable, and easy to work with from start to finish. Everything was explained clearly, and the process felt smooth and well organized. I appreciated the responsiveness and attention to detail throughout. Highly recommend to anyone looking for quality service and a reliable team.
Laila Ali

Laila Ali

Dec 24, 2025

Google
Has been super good so far. Anytime I have any questions about anything they are always happy to help. The process was pretty straightforward and simple. Starting to feel much better.
Bill anonymous

Bill anonymous

Feb 22, 2026

Google
Get Gambit has been the best! Best decision ever!! The customer service has been phenomenal, You can tell Get Gambit values the patient experience. From intake to consultation, everything felt structured but still personal. They took time to understand the situation instead of offering a generic solution.. I know what a great company looks like, they treat their customers like kings. Eric has been very knowledgeable and responsive. Dr. Salim tailored a custom plan to my needs. All the assessments were virtual which was very convenient for me. The medications are usually covered by the insurance and deliveries have discreet and really fast. Highly grateful for finding this professional online clinic, again best decision ever!!
Ray

Ray

Oct 24, 2023

Google
This feels like how healthcare should be in 2026: efficient, digital, and personalized. Booking was easy, the consultation was smooth and totally free and the care plan made sense. From my first inquiry to my follow-up appointment, the customer service at Get Gambit exceptionally stood out, Eric has been very helpful. Every message was answered quickly and clearly. I never felt like I was chasing anyone for updates. The team made sure I understood each step and checked in afterward to see how things were going. That level of responsiveness makes a big difference.
Chaotic Closet

Chaotic Closet

Feb 18, 2026

Google
I had an excellent experience with Get Gambit. I ran into a delivery issue where the carrier lost my package containing a three-month supply of TRT and Pregnyl. Despite the situation being out of their control, Eric handled the case quickly and professionally. He took charge of the issue right away and arranged for my order to be reshipped at no additional cost. The communication was clear, reassuring, and efficient throughout the entire process. Great customer service, reliable support, and a company that truly stands behind its customers. I highly recommend Get Gambit.
Stephane Michon

Stephane Michon

Feb 2, 2026

Google
Initially had issues/misunderstandings with billing shipping, etc. there seemed to be a bit of disconnect between the Dr and the support team. The doctor himself has been awesome… informative and available which is had to find. I just started my first week and everything appears to be sorted out personally by him. His follow up shows me that he takes pride in how his company works. Definitely ain't cheap lol but if you have an insurance carrier that covers a portion of it I would say go for it. We'll see what happens in the next few months with this 55 yr old
Mac

Mac

Jan 30, 2026

Google
1 specialty hormone clinic in Canada
25,000 1-on-1 consultations
40 years of medical experience

The Executive Ceiling is Biological.

Introducing Gambit Gold — Canada’s most advanced executive health program. It gives you direct, one-on-one video meetings with Dr. Hatem Salim — Gambit’s medical director, internal medicine specialist, and Associate Professor of Medicine at Western University — on demand. He walks you through your file and explains exactly what every marker means, and what to do next.

A yearly physical sees a snapshot. Gold builds a record.

The internal medicine specialist who reads every panel.

Dr. Hatem Salim — former Program Director of Internal Medicine at Victoria Hospital — reads every Gambit panel against optimal ranges, not just lab-reference ranges. He spent years training Canadian internists before he started reading panels at Gambit.

Dr. Hatem S. Salim, MD, FRCPC

Dr. Hatem S. Salim, MD, FRCPC

Medical Director & Internal Medicine Specialist

Internal medicine specialist & Associate Professor of Medicine, Western University. Reviews every patient’s bloodwork personally. Oversees all treatment protocols.

Issmaeel Lawendy, RPh

Issmaeel Lawendy, RPh

CEO & Chief Pharmacist, Founder

Experienced pharmacist and former Senior VP in Canadian pharma. Oversees pharmacy operations and patient medication plans.

Wala Al Shaikh Yasin, MS, RD

Wala Al Shaikh Yasin, MS, RD

Registered Dietitian

Clinical dietitian specializing in individualized nutrition, diabetes management, weight management, and lifestyle change.

Shereen Hassib, MSc, RD

Shereen Hassib, MSc, RD

Registered Dietitian

Evidence-based nutrition guidance. Coaches patients on nutrition and lifestyle changes that support treatment outcomes.

White-glove care, built in.

Dedicated team

Your team knows your history. You’re not a ticket number.

Custom protocols

Built around your bloodwork, goals, and body.

Ongoing monitoring

Regular bloodwork repeated on schedule. Dose adjustments by your specialist.

Bloodwork FAQs

Still have questions? Book a call with our health team

Does my panel include a consultation?

Yes. Every bloodwork purchase includes a written interpretation from our internal medicine specialist — your numbers compared against optimal ranges (not just lab-reference ranges) with context and recommended next steps — plus a call with our health team to walk through your results. If your numbers suggest treatment would help, you can upgrade into a Gambit protocol at any time and specialist care continues from there.

What’s the difference between Check, Essential, and Comprehensive?

Check is a focused 3–5 marker panel built around one area — testosterone, growth hormone, thyroid, adrenal, or metabolic. Essential is around twenty markers covering reproductive hormones, thyroid, metabolic, lipids, and key nutrients — the standard annual baseline most patients land on. Comprehensive is our flagship 35+ marker panel covering hormones, thyroid, metabolic, cardiovascular, liver, kidney, inflammation, and nutrients — everything our specialist needs to read your full picture.

How often should I test?

Annually for Comprehensive — that’s the cadence that builds a useful year-over-year picture. If you’re actively optimizing or running a treatment protocol, you’ll test more frequently, at the cadence your protocol calls for. Single-area Check panels can be useful in between baselines if you want to track one number without re-running everything.

What happens after I get my results?

You’ll see every marker plotted against optimal ranges — not just the lab’s reference ranges — alongside our specialist’s written interpretation and recommended next steps. If your data shows a Gambit protocol would help, you can upgrade into treatment whenever you’re ready. If it doesn’t, you keep the read and the recommendations on file and re-test when it’s time.

Do I need to fast before my draw?

Yes — ten to twelve hours, water only. We’ll send a prep guide after you order, including which supplements to pause and when to schedule your draw to make fasting easy.

Where do I get my blood drawn?

Any Dynacare or LifeLabs location in your province — the same labs your family doctor uses. You’ll receive a requisition by email after ordering, and you book the draw appointment directly with the lab at whichever location is closest to you.

Is bloodwork available where I live?

We offer bloodwork services across Canada. Pick the panel you want and complete checkout — our team will confirm coverage for your specific location and follow up if anything needs sorting before your requisition is issued.

What if my results show something concerning?

Every result comes with context, optimal ranges, and our internal medicine specialist’s written read — so you’re never staring at a number alone trying to figure out what it means. If a marker is significantly out of range, our specialist flags it directly in your report with next-step guidance, and we’ll always recommend sharing critical findings with your family doctor so your full care record stays current.

How does pricing work?

Each panel is a one-time purchase — there’s no subscription and nothing auto-renews. Check starts at $100, Essential is $299, and Comprehensive is $485 (provincial sales applies at checkout). Add-ons are à la carte and priced per add-on.

Can I add specialty tests later?

Yes — add-ons can be purchased any time, before or after your baseline draw. The menu includes heavy metals (lead, mercury, arsenic, cadmium and beyond), environmental mold and CIRS panels, mycotoxin testing, Lyme markers, preventative genetic risk panels (cancer, cardiovascular, arrhythmia, metabolic), and food sensitivity testing (IgE, IgG, IgG4). You don’t need to commit upfront — start with the tier that fits, layer in specialty tests as questions come up.

What’s included with a bloodwork purchase?

Every order includes your lab requisition, your blood draw at a certified Canadian lab (Dynacare or LifeLabs), all lab processing, a written interpretation from our top internal medicine specialist, a walk-through call with our health team, and your full results in your private Gambit dashboard. Treatment is separate — only added if your numbers show it would help, and only if you choose to take that step.

What’s your refund policy?

Refunds are available before your lab requisition is issued (less a small processing fee). Once the requisition is issued, we can’t refund — because a practitioner has already reviewed your case to issue and prepare to interpret the requisition, and if your results come back with anything significant we’re legally obligated to follow up with you on it. You have six months to use your requisition before it expires. Full terms live on our Refund Policy page.

Still have questions? Book a call with our health team