Most adults who get an annual checkup receive the same result: everything looks fine. Values are within reference ranges, the doctor says to continue with current habits, and the appointment ends. Twelve months later, the process repeats.
The problem is not the checkup -- it is what that checkup is measuring, and what it is not measuring. Conventional medicine was designed to detect present disease. Longevity-oriented preventive medicine asks a different question: what is happening right now that, without intervention, could become a problem in 10 or 20 years?
Why the distinction matters
This matters because most prevalent chronic diseases have a subclinical phase of 10 to 25 years before diagnosis. During that phase, biological markers change detectably, habits accelerate or slow the process, and there is a real window of opportunity to modify the trajectory.
What a standard checkup measures vs. what matters
A standard lab panel typically includes complete blood count, fasting glucose, basic lipid profile, and renal and hepatic function. These are useful markers, but they are biased toward detecting present disease rather than evaluating future risk.
Total LDL cholesterol has been progressively displaced by more predictive measures like LDL particle number (LDL-P) or lipoprotein(a), Lp(a). Lp(a) is elevated in approximately 20% of the population and is an independent cardiovascular risk factor the standard panel does not detect.
Markers that add real information
- Fasting insulin + HOMA-IR: detects insulin resistance before glucose rises.
- High-sensitivity CRP: marker of systemic inflammation. Values above 1 mg/L deserve attention.
- HbA1c: reflects average glucose over the past 90 days.
- Serum Vitamin D: deficiency associated with higher cardiovascular, immunological, and cognitive risk.
- TSH and free T4: subclinical thyroid dysfunction frequently underdiagnosed.
- Total and free testosterone, DHEA-S: hormonal markers relevant for metabolic, muscular, and cognitive health.
What the evidence says about proactive prevention
The INTERHEART study (Lancet, 2004) with data from 52 countries and more than 29,000 participants found that nine modifiable risk factors explain 90% of acute myocardial infarctions in men and 94% in women. All are modifiable lifestyle factors or biomarkers.
The different question
Next time you evaluate your health, change the question. Not just: do I have something now? But also: what is happening in my biology that in 15 years could be a problem? What systems do I need to strengthen now? Those questions lead to completely different strategies.
References
This article is educational and does not replace individual clinical evaluation. If you have questions about your health, consult a medical professional.
Knowledge without application changes nothing.
At Kaizen we translate this into a personalized protocol, with real medical support, adapted to your specific biology.
