biotech Private blood test panel

Tired All The Time blood test Manchester

The Tired All The Time blood test is a fatigue-focused panel for people who feel persistently tired and want common blood marker groups reviewed. It can help you compare useful marker groups before deciding whether to book, seek advice or arrange follow-up.

What does the Tired All The Time blood test check?

Fatigue-focused checks including full blood count, thyroid, iron, nutritional, inflammation, liver, kidney, diabetes, and bone markers.

  • full blood count
  • thyroid markers
  • iron status
  • nutritional markers
  • inflammation
  • liver and kidney markers
  • diabetes markers
  • bone markers

Who may find this panel useful?

Useful when

  • You feel tired regularly and want to compare common blood markers linked with fatigue.
  • You want thyroid, iron, nutritional, inflammation, diabetes, liver and kidney context in one panel.
  • You know fatigue can have many causes and may still need GP review if symptoms persist.

Before booking

  • Confirm any fasting, medication, timing or sample requirements before attending.
  • Tell the clinic if you are pregnant, acutely unwell, taking regular medicines or have a known condition.
  • Bring any relevant previous results if you want to compare changes over time.

Specific biomarkers included in this panel

These biomarker names are taken from the Manchester Chemist advanced blood tests catalogue. They are grouped to make it easier to see what the panel covers and why each marker may be useful.

Catalogue biomarker count: 53 Grouped sections: 6

Full Blood Count 13 markers

Haemoglobin

The oxygen-carrying protein in red blood cells. It helps assess anaemia, bleeding, and red-cell health.

Hematocrit

The proportion of blood made up of red blood cells. It can support anaemia, hydration, and blood-count assessment.

Mean Cell Haemoglobin

An index showing the average amount of haemoglobin in red blood cells, useful in anaemia assessment.

Mean Cell Haemoglobin Concentration (MCHC)

An index showing haemoglobin concentration within red blood cells, useful in anaemia assessment.

Mean Cell Volume

An index showing average red blood cell size, which can help distinguish different anaemia patterns.

Red Blood Cell Count

The number of red blood cells in the blood. It helps assess anaemia, hydration, and red-cell production.

Basophil Count

A type of white blood cell. Results may be considered alongside allergy, inflammation, infection, and full blood count findings.

Lymphocyte Count

A white blood cell type involved in immune response. Results can change with infections, inflammation, and some blood conditions.

Eosinophil Count

A white blood cell type often considered in allergy, asthma, inflammation, and some infections.

Monocyte Count

A white blood cell type involved in immune response and inflammation. It is interpreted with the wider full blood count.

Neutrophil Count

A white blood cell type important for fighting bacterial infection. Results can shift with infection, inflammation, and medicines.

White Blood Cell Count

The total number of white blood cells. It can change with infection, inflammation, stress, medicines, and blood conditions.

Platelet Count

Platelets help blood clot. Results can support assessment of bleeding risk, inflammation, infection, or bone marrow activity.

Liver Health 6 markers

Alkaline Phosphatase

An enzyme linked with the liver, bile ducts, and bone. Raised results are interpreted with other liver and bone markers.

Alanine Aminotransferase

Also known as ALT, this liver enzyme can rise when liver cells are irritated or damaged. It is usually reviewed alongside other liver markers.

Aspartate Transferase

Also known as AST, this enzyme can be linked with liver, muscle, or other tissue irritation, so context matters.

Gamma-glutamyl Transferase

Also known as GGT, this liver enzyme is often reviewed with other liver markers and can be affected by alcohol, medicines, or bile duct issues.

Total Bilirubin

The total bilirubin level in blood, used with liver enzymes and symptoms to assess liver, bile duct, or red-cell turnover patterns.

Albumin

A major blood protein made by the liver. It can support assessment of liver function, nutrition, inflammation, and kidney protein loss.

Kidney Health 11 markers

Creatinine

A waste product filtered by the kidneys. It is commonly used with eGFR to assess kidney function.

eGFR

Estimated glomerular filtration rate. It estimates kidney filtering function using blood results and patient factors.

Chloride

An electrolyte involved in fluid and acid-base balance. It is usually interpreted alongside sodium, potassium, kidney function, and hydration status.

Potassium

An electrolyte important for muscle and heart rhythm. Abnormal results need careful interpretation and sometimes urgent review.

Phosphate

A mineral important for bone, energy, and kidney function. It is interpreted with calcium, vitamin D, and parathyroid hormone.

Sodium

An electrolyte involved in fluid balance, nerves, and muscles. It is interpreted with kidney function, hydration, and medication history.

Urea

A waste product processed by the kidneys. It can reflect kidney function, hydration, protein intake, and other factors.

Cystatin C

A kidney-function marker that can give extra context alongside creatinine and eGFR in some people.

Magnesium

A mineral involved in muscle, nerve, heart, and energy function. It is interpreted with symptoms and other electrolytes.

Uric Acid

A waste product from purine metabolism. Raised levels can be linked with gout, kidney stones, and metabolic risk.

Calcium

A mineral important for bones, nerves, muscles, and heart rhythm. It is interpreted with albumin, vitamin D, kidney, and parathyroid markers.

Bone Health 11 markers

Alkaline Phosphatase

An enzyme linked with the liver, bile ducts, and bone. Raised results are interpreted with other liver and bone markers.

Glucose

A blood sugar marker. It can support diabetes and metabolic assessment, especially when interpreted with fasting status and HbA1c.

HbA1c

A marker of average blood sugar over roughly the previous 2 to 3 months. It is commonly used in diabetes assessment and monitoring.

Insulin

A hormone that helps move glucose from blood into cells. It can support insulin-resistance and diabetes-related assessment.

C-Peptide

A marker related to how much insulin the body is producing. It can support diabetes and insulin-production assessment.

Ferritin

A marker of iron storage. Low ferritin can suggest reduced iron stores, while high ferritin can also be linked with inflammation or liver issues.

Iron

A mineral needed for haemoglobin and oxygen transport. It is usually interpreted with ferritin, transferrin, and TIBC.

Total Iron Binding Capacity

A marker showing how much iron the blood can bind, often used with iron, ferritin, and transferrin saturation.

Transferrin

A protein that carries iron in the blood. It helps interpret iron availability and iron deficiency patterns.

Transferrin Saturation

A calculation showing how much transferrin is carrying iron. It helps assess low or high iron states.

C-Reactive Protein

An inflammation marker. Raised levels can occur with infection, inflammation, injury, or other conditions and need clinical context.

Nutritional Health 6 markers

Folic Acid

A folate-related vitamin marker. It supports assessment of red blood cell production and nutritional status.

Vitamin B12

A vitamin important for red blood cells and nerve function. Low levels can be linked with tiredness, anaemia, and neurological symptoms.

Vitamin D

A vitamin important for bone, muscle, and immune health. Low levels are common and interpreted with calcium and symptoms.

Calcium (Adjusted)

Calcium corrected for albumin level. It can give a more useful view of calcium status than total calcium alone.

Albumin

A major blood protein made by the liver. It can support assessment of liver function, nutrition, inflammation, and kidney protein loss.

Iron

A mineral needed for haemoglobin and oxygen transport. It is usually interpreted with ferritin, transferrin, and TIBC.

Thyroid Health 6 markers

Thyroid Stimulating Hormone

Also known as TSH, this pituitary hormone helps assess whether the thyroid is underactive or overactive.

Free Tri-iodothyronine (FT3)

An active thyroid hormone marker. It can add context in selected thyroid assessments.

Free Thyroxine (FT4)

A thyroid hormone marker. It is usually interpreted alongside TSH and sometimes FT3 to assess thyroid function.

Anti-Thyroglobulin Antibody

A thyroid antibody that can support assessment of autoimmune thyroid conditions when reviewed with TSH, FT4, FT3, and symptoms.

Anti-Thyroid Peroxidase

A thyroid antibody often used when autoimmune thyroid disease is being considered. It does not diagnose symptoms by itself.

Antibody

A general immune-system marker. The meaning depends on the exact antibody being measured and the wider panel context.

A biomarker result should not be read in isolation. Medicines, timing, hydration, recent illness, exercise, pregnancy, and medical history can all affect results.

Understanding your results

Blood test results should be interpreted with your symptoms, medical history, medication, age, sex and the laboratory reference range. A result outside the reference range does not always mean a serious problem, and a result inside range does not always explain symptoms.

If results are abnormal, symptoms are ongoing, or you are worried, arrange appropriate medical follow-up. Manchester Chemist can help with the practical testing route, but diagnosis and treatment decisions should be made with a suitably qualified clinician.

Seek urgent medical help if you have severe chest pain, severe breathlessness, fainting, symptoms of stroke, severe infection symptoms, heavy bleeding, or you feel seriously unwell.