DoctoriumGP Wellness & Aesthetics Clinic
Sarah Collins
Health Report
Sarah Collins
ELITE HEALTH OPTIMISATION

Your Health, Transformed

Comprehensive biomarker analysis and personalised optimisation for peak performance

Age 45 162 cm Female
15
YEARS YOUNGER
Biological Age
54.9kg
WEIGHT
Healthy BMI 20.9
40.5kg
MUSCLE MASS
73.8% Lean Tissue

Metabolic Age

15 Years Younger
30
Metabolic Age

Chronological Age

45
Born 1981

Years Younger

-15
Top 5-10% for age group

BMR

1,255 kcal
5,251 kJ — Daily basal burn
Exceptional Metabolic Health

Key Metrics

Weight
54.9kg
Desirable: 49–66 kg
−3.5 kg (11 weeks)
Body Fat
22.3%
Target: 18% • Healthy: 24–36%
−2.0% (11 weeks)
Muscle Mass
40.5kg
73.8% of total body weight
−1.4 kg from initial
BMI
20.9
Healthy: 18.5–25.0
Optimal range
Visceral Fat
3
Healthy: 1–12 • Scale: 1–59
Excellent
Body Water
53.3%
29.26 kg total body water
Good hydration
Bone Mass
2.2kg
4.0% of total body weight
Healthy range
Fat-Free Mass
42.7kg
77.8% of total body weight
Strong lean mass ratio
Sarah Collins - Body Composition
TANITA PRO

Body Composition Analysis

40.5 kg
12.2 kg
2.2 kg
Muscle Mass — 40.5 kg (73.8%)
Fat Mass — 12.2 kg (22.3%)
Bone Mass — 2.2 kg (4.0%)
Body Fat % 22.3%
0% Below healthy range — Athletic 36%
BMI 20.9
15 Healthy: 18.5 – 25 40
Visceral Fat Rating 3
1 Healthy: 1–12 59
Muscle Mass 40.5 kg
0 kg 73.8% of body weight 54.9 kg
Body Water 53.3%
0% Optimal: 45–60% 75%
Protein 11.24 kg
0 kg 20.5% of body weight 17.5 kg

Percentile Rankings

vs UK Women Age 40–49
91st
%ile

Body Fat %

At 22.3%, Sarah is leaner than ~89% of UK women her age. Below the "healthy" range floor of 24% — this is athletic-level leanness.

92nd
%ile

Visceral Fat

A rating of 3 out of 59 is exceptional. Minimal internal organ fat, placing Sarah in the top 8% for metabolic health risk profile.

95th
%ile

Metabolic Age

A metabolic age of 30 vs chronological 45 is a 33% reduction. This places Sarah in the top 5% — her body functions like someone 15 years younger.

60th
%ile

BMI

At 20.9, Sarah sits in the ideal middle of the healthy range. Leaner than ~62% of UK women aged 40–49, where average BMI is 27.5.

75th
%ile

Muscle Mass

40.5 kg at 54.9 kg body weight is an impressive 73.8% ratio. Above average for age group, indicating consistent strength training and good protein synthesis.

80th
%ile

Leg Muscle Score

Scoring ~98 on the leg muscle scale, well above the age-reference curve. Strong lower body foundation — critical for longevity and fall prevention.

Segmental Analysis

Segment Mass Rating Assessment
Trunk 24 kg 0 Average
Left Arm 1.8 kg -1 Below Avg
Right Arm 1.8 kg -1 Below Avg
Left Leg 6.4 kg -1 Below Avg
Right Leg 6.4 kg 0 Average
Segment Fat % Rating Assessment
Trunk 16.6% / 5 kg -2 Very Low
Left Arm 26.6% / 0.7 kg -1 Below Avg
Right Arm 25.9% / 0.7 kg -1 Below Avg
Left Leg 30.1% / 2.9 kg -2 Very Low
Right Leg 29.9% / 2.9 kg -2 Very Low
Key Insight
Trunk and leg fat remain rated -2 (very low) — exceptional for a 45-year-old female. Arm fat has improved to -1 in both arms. Muscle mass is the focus area now, with both arms and left leg rated -1. Targeted upper and lower body resistance training with increased protein intake could help preserve and rebuild muscle mass during the continued cut. Overall left/right symmetry remains excellent.

BMI Classification

Underweight
Healthy
Overweight
Obese
20.9
< 18.5 18.5 25 30 40+
Optimal — Dead centre of healthy range

Scan History

4 Body Composition Scans
Date Weight Body Fat % Muscle Visceral BMI Met. Age Water %
24 Feb 2026 Latest 55.0 kg 22.8% 40.5 kg 3 20.7 30 53.3%
8 Feb 2026 55.4 kg 23.3% 40.5 kg 3 20.9 30 53.0%
25 Jan 2026 55.5 kg 22.2% 41.1 kg 3 20.9 30 53.7%
6 Jan 2026 56.5 kg 23.5% 41.9 kg 3 21.3 30 52.8%
Weight: −1.5 kg over 11 weeks
Muscle: −1.4 kg (needs attention)
Visceral fat: stable at 3 (excellent)

11-Week Trend

Consistent Fat Loss
60 55 42 22 6 Jan 25 Jan 8 Feb 24 Feb 58.4 56.6 55.6 54.9 41.9 41.1 41.3 40.5 24.3% 23.6% 21.8% 22.3%
Weight (kg)
Muscle Mass (kg)
Body Fat (%)
−3.5 kg
Weight Lost
58.4 → 54.9 (11 weeks)
−1.4 kg
Muscle Change
41.9 → 40.5 (monitor)
−2.0%
Body Fat Dropped
24.3% → 22.3%

Progress Tracker

4 Scans

Body Composition Scan History

6 Jan – 24 Feb 2026
Date Weight Body Fat % Muscle Visceral BMI Met. Age BMR Water % Bone
24 Feb Latest 54.9 kg 22.3% 40.5 kg 3 20.9 30 1,212 53.3% 2.2 kg
8 Feb 55.6 kg 21.8% 41.3 kg 3 21.2 30 1,226 54.1% 2.2 kg
25 Jan 56.6 kg 23.6% 41.1 kg 3 21.6 30 1,229 52.7% 2.2 kg
6 Jan 58.4 kg 24.3% 41.9 kg 4 22.2 31 1,254 52.1% 2.3 kg
−3.5kg
Weight Lost
−2.0%
Body Fat Dropped
4→3
Visceral Fat Down
30
Metabolic Age Steady
⚠️
Priority Concern — Muscle Mass Decline

Muscle mass has dropped from 41.9 kg to 40.5 kg (−1.4 kg) over 7 weeks. Resistance training 2×/week with 88–110g daily protein is now the single most important intervention.

Blood Tests
BIOMARKERS

Blood Test Results

5.0 mmol/L
Total Cholesterol
Optimal
1.49 mmol/L
HDL Cholesterol
Optimal
0.71 mmol/L
Triglycerides
Excellent
1.07 miu/L
TSH (Thyroid)
Normal
986 pmol/L
Oestradiol
Mid-Cycle
142 g/L
Haemoglobin
Normal
Key Interpretation

All 31 biomarkers within normal ranges. Excellent lipid profile with low triglycerides (0.71) and good HDL (1.49). Thyroid function optimal. Oestradiol at mid-cycle level consistent with menstrual phase. Iron and calcium within range. No flags requiring clinical intervention.

Blood Test Date: 20 February 2026
Marker Result Unit Range Status Position in Range
White Cell Count 5.53 ×10&sup9;/L 4.0–10.0 Normal
Haemoglobin 142 g/L 120–150 Normal
Platelet Count 288 ×10&sup9;/L 150–410 Normal
Red Blood Cells 4.54 ×10¹²/L 3.8–4.8 Normal
Haematocrit 0.417 L/L 0.360–0.460 Normal
MCV 91.9 fL 83–101 Normal
MCH 31.3 pg 27–32 Normal
MCHC 341 g/L 315–345 Normal
Neutrophils 3.56 ×10&sup9;/L 2.0–7.0 Normal
Lymphocytes 1.50 ×10&sup9;/L 1.0–3.0 Normal
Monocytes 0.39 ×10&sup9;/L 0.2–1.0 Normal
Eosinophils 0.03 ×10&sup9;/L 0.02–0.50 Normal
Basophils 0.05 ×10&sup9;/L 0.02–0.10 Normal
Marker Result Unit Range Status Position in Range
Sodium 137 mmol/L 133–146 Normal
Potassium 4.6 mmol/L 3.5–5.3 Normal
Urea 3.5 mmol/L 2.5–7.8 Normal
Creatinine 62.0 µmol/L 45–84 Normal
eGFR >90 mL/min/1.73m² Normal
Total Protein 75 g/L 60–80 Normal
Albumin 46 g/L 35–50 Normal
Globulin 29 g/L 19–33 Normal
Bilirubin 10 µmol/L 0–21 Normal
Alk Phosphatase 51 u/L 35–104 Normal
ALT 8 u/L 0–40 Normal
Marker Result Status
Total Cholesterol 5.0 mmol/L Normal
HDL Cholesterol 1.49 mmol/L Optimal
Triglycerides 0.71 mmol/L Normal
Marker Result Range Status
TSH 1.07 miu/L 0.27–4.20 Normal
Free T4 16.3 pmol/L 12.0–22.0 Normal
Free T3 3.9 pmol/L 3.1–6.8 Normal
Marker Result Range Status
Oestradiol 986 pmol/L 222–1959 Normal
Mid-cycle reference range
Marker Result Range Status
Serum Iron 16 µmol/L 5.83–34.5 Normal
Calcium 2.39 mmol/L 2.00–2.60 Normal
Adj. Calcium 2.35 mmol/L 2.20–2.60 Normal
Textbook Blood Panel
Every single marker falls within the normal reference range. Kidney function (eGFR >90, creatinine 62), liver function (ALT 8, bilirubin 10), lipid profile (total cholesterol 5.0, HDL 1.49, triglycerides 0.71), thyroid (TSH 1.07), and full blood count are all healthy. Oestradiol at 986 pmol/L is consistent with mid-cycle levels. Iron and calcium are well within range. This blood panel fully supports the exceptional metabolic health seen in the body composition data.
Wearable Technology
WEARABLE DATA

Ultrahuman Ring AIR

Wearable Data

18–24 Feb 2026 • 7-Day Summary
Resting Heart Rate
56bpm
Lowest recorded
Avg sleep HR: 80 bpm
Optimal
HRV (RMSSD)
137ms
7-day average
Peak: 255 ms • Night avg: 121 ms
Excellent — Top decile for age 45
Blood Oxygen (SpO2)
98.0%
Average (range 97–99%)
Normal
Respiratory Rate
16.0br/min
Breaths per minute
Normal
Skin Temperature
33.0°C
Stable baseline
Daily Steps
9,928
Avg • Best: 12,211 (22 Feb)
Active Minutes
5
Sessions in 7 days • Walking + Yoga
19 Feb
Indoor Walking (20 min)
20 Feb
Yoga (10 min) + Outdoor Walking (15 min)
22 Feb
Indoor Walking (20 min) + Outdoor Walking (55 min) + Indoor Walking (25 min)
23 Feb
Outdoor Walking (15 min)
Device Information
Device Ultrahuman Ring AIR
Ring ID 756489
Firmware v02.00.14.03
Active Since 18 Feb 2026
HRV Insight
HRV of 137 ms average is exceptional for a 45-year-old female, placing Sarah in the top decile for her age group. Combined with a resting heart rate of 56 bpm, this indicates strong parasympathetic (vagal) tone and excellent cardiovascular fitness. The HRV peak of 255 ms during sleep suggests deep restorative recovery is occurring consistently.
Biological Age
LONGEVITY

Biological Age — GlycanAge

Biological Age

7 May 2025 • Test Kit GA-UK-025236
20
Biological Age
Chronological Age
44
24 Years Younger
Biological Age
20
95th
Glycan Shield (S)
Anti-inflammatory
Score: 0.189
Optimal
85th
Glycan Youth (G2)
Anti-inflammatory
Score: 0.283
Optimal
8th
Glycan Mature (G0)
Pro-inflammatory
Score: 0.143
Optimal (lower is better)
23rd
Glycan Median (G1)
Supportive
Score: 0.574
Suboptimal
Reduced vascular resilience
41st
Glycan Bisection (B)
Supportive
Score: 0.113
Optimal
Health Systems Overview
Cardiovascular: Optimal Metabolic: Optimal Autoimmune: Optimal Respiratory: Slightly Out of Range Female Health: Optimal
Clinical Recommendations
Primary
Maintain and protect current inflammation regulation. Evaluate whether optimal results are driven by HRT, genetic factors, or lifestyle. Current strategies are successfully controlling inflammation.
Secondary
Enhance vascular resilience and stabilise autonomic function. Maintain regular aerobic and resistance training. Improve recovery quality via sleep and stress regulation.
Retest Interval
9–12 months recommended
GlycanAge Insight
A biological age of 20 — twenty-four years younger than chronological age — is an extraordinary result. Sarah’s glycan profile shows exceptional immune regulation with minimal chronic inflammation. The Glycan Shield at the 95th percentile and Glycan Youth at the 85th percentile demonstrate powerful anti-inflammatory protection. The only area to monitor is the Glycan Median (G1) at the 23rd percentile, suggesting slightly reduced vascular resilience. Combined with her textbook blood panel, metabolic age of 30, and excellent HRV data, this paints a picture of someone ageing at roughly half the normal rate.
DNA Genetics
GENETICS

DNA & Methylation Analysis

DNA Testing

2026 • 5 Reports Analysed
Methylation
Methionine Cycle Impaired
Folate Cycle Moderate
Methionine Cycle Impaired
Transsulphuration Moderate
BH4 Cycle Moderate
Urea Cycle Moderate
Nutrition
7 Raised Nutrient Needs
Vitamin A Folate Vitamin C B12 Vitamin D Vitamin E Omega-3 Riboflavin B6 Antioxidants
Fitness
Slow Recovery, High Injury Risk
Training Profile Balanced
VO2max Trainability Medium
Recovery Slow
Injury Predisposition High
Skin
High Ageing & Inflammation
Skin Ageing High
Oxidative Stress Raised
Inflammatory Response High
Detoxification Reduced
Nickel Sensitivity Raised
Carb Sensitivity Medium
Sleep & Stress
Low Sleep Quality, Warrior Genotype
Chronotype Mixed
Sleep Quality Low
Caffeine Sensitivity Higher
Stress Tolerance Raised
Warrior/Strategist Warrior GG
Key Genetic Variants
Gene Variant Effect Impact
MTHFR (C677T) CT 40% reduced enzyme activity Amber
MTRR GG Downregulated B12 recycling Red
BHMT AA Downregulated homocysteine conversion Red
PEMT TT Reduced choline synthesis Red
TCN2 GG Reduced B12 transport Red
CBS AA Upregulated — pulls homocysteine Amber
GSS TT Reduced glutathione synthesis Red
NOS3 GT Reduced nitric oxide production Amber
SOD2 CT Reduced superoxide dismutase Amber
VDR CT Impaired vitamin D metabolism Amber
MAOA GT Slower neurotransmitter breakdown Amber
Nutrition Sensitivities
Carbohydrate: Medium Saturated Fat: Medium Salt: Raised Caffeine: Higher Lactose: Tolerant Fructose: Tolerant Coeliac: Raised Predisposition Sugar Preference: Normal Bitter Taste: Likely Taster Alcohol: Positive Response Detox Phase I: Raised Risk Detox Phase II: Raised Cruciferous Need
Stride DNA Insight
Stride’s 5-report DNA panel reveals a complex but actionable genetic picture. The impaired Methionine Cycle, combined with 7 raised nutrient needs, underscores the importance of targeted supplementation — particularly methylated B vitamins (5-MTHF folate, methylcobalamin B12), vitamin D, omega-3 and antioxidants (vitamins C and E). The slow recovery profile and high injury predisposition point to longer rest periods between intense exercise and a focus on prehabilitative work for tendons and joints. The high inflammatory response and raised oxidative stress in the skin report align with the methylation findings, suggesting systemic inflammation management through diet and lifestyle is a priority. The warrior (GG) COMT genotype explains strong stress resilience but may require deadline pressure to perform optimally. Crucially, the raised coeliac predisposition warrants monitoring for gluten sensitivity symptoms.

Genetic Pathway Deep-Dive

6 Key Variants • Stride DNA Analysis
🧬

MTHFR C677T — Folate Cycle

CT heterozygous • MTR AG variant • 40% reduced folate conversion
Moderate Impact

In plain English: Your body is 40% less efficient at converting the folate in food and standard supplements into the form your cells can actually use. Think of it like having a narrower fuel pipe — the engine works fine, but you need the right type of fuel (methylfolate) to get through the smaller opening. Regular folic acid (the cheap kind in multivitamins and fortified bread) actually makes this worse because it clogs the system. The fix is simple: take methylfolate instead of folic acid, and eat folate-rich whole foods like spinach, eggs, and liver.

✕ Avoid

  • Folic acid supplements (standard form blocks receptors)
  • Fortified grains & cereals (contain synthetic folic acid)
  • Ultra-processed foods with unmetabolised folic acid

✓ Support

  • 5-MTHF (methylfolate) 400–800 mcg — bypasses genetic block
  • Leafy greens: spinach, kale, broccoli (natural food folate)
  • Liver & eggs (bioavailable folate)
  • Methylated B-complex for all active forms
🔄

Impaired Methionine Cycle — 5 Variants

MTRR GG • BHMT AA • PEMT TT • FUT2 AG • TCN2 GG
High Impact

Five interacting variants compound across B12 recycling, backup methylation, phospholipid synthesis, intestinal absorption, and cellular transport. Net effect: substantially reduced B12 bioavailability at the cellular level and compromised homocysteine recycling. Cyanocobalamin (cheapest supplement form) cannot be utilised efficiently.

✕ Avoid

  • Cyanocobalamin B12 (use methylcobalamin only)
  • Excessive alcohol (depletes B12, impairs methylation)
  • Processed meats & refined carbs (elevate homocysteine)

✓ Support

  • Methylcobalamin B12 1000 mcg sublingual
  • TMG (betaine) 500 mg — supports BHMT backup pathway
  • Phosphatidylcholine (compensates PEMT TT)
  • Choline-rich foods: eggs, liver, oily fish
  • Vitamin B6 as P5P (active cofactor form)

CBS AA — Upregulated Transsulphuration

CBS upregulated • GSS TT (reduced glutathione synthesis)
Moderate Impact

Overactive CBS shunts homocysteine rapidly towards cysteine/sulphate, depleting SAMe. Combined with GSS TT reducing glutathione synthetase, antioxidant defence is compromised. High-dose sulphur supplements overwhelm this already accelerated pathway.

✕ Avoid

  • High-dose NAC, MSM, alpha-lipoic acid (sulphur overload)
  • Excessive raw cruciferous vegetables (cooked is fine)

✓ Support

  • Liposomal glutathione — bypasses synthesis block
  • Molybdenum 150 mcg (sulphur metabolism cofactor)
  • Vitamin B6 as P5P (regulates CBS activity)
  • Adequate dietary protein for cysteine supply
☀️

VDR CT — Raised Vitamin D Requirement

Vitamin D receptor variant • Reduced receptor sensitivity
Actionable

VDR CT reduces efficiency of cellular response to vitamin D. Standard 400–800 IU doses are inadequate for this genotype. Target serum level: 100–150 nmol/L (vs standard 50–75 nmol/L).

✕ Avoid

  • Standard 400–800 IU doses (insufficient for this variant)
  • Sunscreen-only approach (blocks synthesis route)

✓ Support

  • Vitamin D3 4,000–5,000 IU daily
  • Vitamin K2 (MK-7) 200 mcg
  • Oily fish 2–3×/week (salmon, mackerel, sardines)
  • 15–20 min direct sun without SPF on arms/legs
  • Regular testing — target 100–150 nmol/L
💓

NOS3 GT — Reduced Nitric Oxide Production

Endothelial NOS variant • Cardiovascular & vascular function
Dietary Intervention Effective

Reduced nitric oxide production affects vasodilation, blood pressure, and endothelial health. The dietary nitrate pathway (oral bacteria convert nitrate → nitrite → NO) is a powerful bypass — but depends on oral bacteria remaining intact.

✕ Avoid

  • Antiseptic mouthwash (kills nitrate-reducing bacteria)
  • Proton pump inhibitors (reduce gastric acid for conversion)
  • High sugar & refined carbs (impair endothelial function)
  • Sedentary periods >2 hours

✓ Support

  • Beetroot juice/powder daily (highest dietary nitrate source)
  • Rocket & spinach (very high nitrate greens)
  • Dark chocolate >70% cacao (flavonoids activate endothelial NO)
  • Watermelon (citrulline → arginine → NO substrate)
  • Garlic (allicin supports NO pathways)
  • Regular exercise & nasal breathing
🛡️

SOD2 CT — Raised Oxidative Stress & Reduced Detox

Superoxide dismutase variant • High skin inflammatory response • Reduced detoxification
High Priority — Skin & Systemic

SOD2 CT reduces mitochondrial antioxidant defence. Combined with high inflammatory skin response and reduced phase I/II detoxification, this creates elevated baseline oxidative burden — accelerating cellular ageing, amplifying inflammatory responses (especially skin), and reducing toxin clearance. This is the primary driver of Sarah’s elevated intrinsic skin ageing score.

✕ Avoid

  • Seed oils (sunflower, rapeseed — high omega-6)
  • Charred/blackened meats (heterocyclic amines)
  • Ultra-processed foods (oxidised fats, additives)
  • Excess UV without protection
  • Smoking or high pollution exposure

✓ Support

  • Astaxanthin 4–12 mg (potent mitochondrial antioxidant)
  • Sulforaphane from broccoli sprouts (activates Nrf2 pathway)
  • NAC 600 mg moderate dose (note CBS variant)
  • Polyphenols: berries, green tea, olive oil
  • Selenium 200 mcg, Zinc 15 mg, Vitamin C 500 mg
Clinical Insight — Variant Interactions
These six variants interact: MTHFR + Methionine Cycle creates a methylation bottleneck reducing SAMe. CBS AA accelerates SAMe drainage. SOD2 CT + reduced detoxification amplifies the oxidative burden. Together: methylated B vitamins are non-negotiable, antioxidant stacking is essential, and vitamin D + dietary nitrate must exceed standard population recommendations.
Healthy Nutrition
NUTRITION

Nutrition & Supplementation

Daily Protein Target
88–110g
1.6–2.0 g/kg body weight • Based on 54.9 kg lean-focused approach
High Protein Anti-Inflammatory Focus Methylation-Supportive
🥩

Protein Sources

  • Wild salmon (omega-3 + protein + D3)
  • Organic eggs (choline + folate + B12)
  • Grass-fed beef liver (methylation powerhouse)
  • Sardines (calcium + omega-3 + CoQ10)
  • Organic chicken thighs (iron + B6)
  • Greek yoghurt (protein + probiotics)
🥬

Priority Vegetables

  • Spinach & rocket (nitrates for NOS3)
  • Broccoli sprouts (sulforaphane for Nrf2)
  • Sweet potatoes (potassium + beta-carotene)
  • Beetroot (dietary nitrate champion)
  • Avocado (potassium + healthy fats)
  • Garlic & onions (allicin + quercetin)
🫐

Antioxidant & Anti-Inflammatory

  • Blueberries & blackberries (polyphenols)
  • Extra virgin olive oil (oleocanthal)
  • Dark chocolate >85% (flavonoids + NO)
  • Green tea (EGCG + L-theanine)
  • Turmeric + black pepper (curcumin)
  • Walnuts (omega-3 + antioxidants)

Weekly Shopping List

Interactive

Proteins

Vegetables & Fruit

Pantry & Extras

⚠️

Foods Specifically Bad For Your Genetics

Not generic advice — these are problematic specifically because of your variant combination

Seed oils — sunflower, rapeseed (SOD2 CT + oxidative stress)
Folic acid — fortified foods, cheap multivitamins (MTHFR C677T)
Charred meats — BBQ, blackened (reduced detox capacity)
Antiseptic mouthwash — kills NO-producing bacteria (NOS3 GT)
High-dose sulphur supps — NAC/MSM mega-doses (CBS AA upregulated)
Ultra-processed foods — emulsifiers, oxidised fats, additives (systemic)
Strength Training
EXERCISE

Exercise & Fitness

Genetic Fitness Profile

STRIDE DNA
Power / Endurance
Balanced
VO2max Potential
Medium
Recovery Speed
Slow
Injury Risk
High

Latest Session

PERSONAL BEST
39
Minutes
4,080kg
Total Volume
6
Compound Moves
37.5kg
PB Pull-Up
+1.5kg / +4.17%

Your 2-Day Training Plan

Designed by Mike | Push/Pull compound split | Tracked via MiLife

Why 2 Days Works

For a full-time surgeon, two quality strength sessions per week is optimal for muscle preservation. Research shows twice-weekly resistance training produces 80–90% of the gains of three sessions, with significantly better recovery and compliance.

Your slow genetic recovery profile (Stride DNA) supports this — more recovery time between sessions means better muscular adaptation and lower injury risk.

DAY A

Lower & Push Focus

Gym with Mike | ~40 min
ExerciseWeightSetsType
DB Bench Press10kg3 setsPUSH
DB Deadlift14kg3 setsCOMPOUND
DB Squat10kg3 setsCOMPOUND
Smith Bent Over Row25kg3 setsPULL
Goblet Squat18kg3 setsCOMPOUND
Push-upsBW10 repsPUSH
Romanian Deadlift14kg2 setsCOMPOUND
Side Lateral Raise4kg3 setsPUSH
Plank HoldBWHoldCORE
DAY B

Upper & Pull Focus

NEW PB
ExerciseWeightSets × RepsType
Deadlift45kg3 setsCOMPOUND
Overhead Press17kg3 setsPUSH
Bulgarian Split Squat18kg3 sets eachCOMPOUND
Lat Pulldown27.5kg3 setsPULL
Hip Thrust10kg3 setsCOMPOUND
Machine-Assisted Pull-Up PB37.5kg3 × 10PULL
Tricep Dip21kg3 setsPUSH
Cable Bicep Curl18kg3 setsPULL
Russian TwistBW3 setsCORE

Home Alternative — Dumbbell Only

For days you can’t get to the gym. Same muscle groups, same push/pull pattern.

HOME DAY A Lower & Push — 35–40 min
DB Goblet Squat3 × 12Hold DB at chest
DB Romanian Deadlift3 × 10Slow eccentric
DB Floor Press3 × 10Lie on floor
DB Bulgarian Split Squat3 × 10 eachRear foot on sofa
Push-ups3 × 10Knees if needed
DB Lateral Raise3 × 12Light, controlled
Plank Hold3 × 30sBrace core
HOME DAY B Upper & Pull — 35–40 min
DB Deadlift3 × 10Full range
DB Overhead Press3 × 10Seated or standing
DB Bent Over Row3 × 12Squeeze blades
DB Hip Thrust3 × 15Back on sofa
DB Bicep Curl3 × 12Alternate arms OK
DB Tricep Kickback3 × 12Full extension
Russian Twist3 × 20Add DB for load
Active Recovery — Remaining 5 Days

Your DNA flags slow recovery. The days between strength sessions are adaptation days, not just rest days. Light movement accelerates recovery.

Walking (Zone 2 HR)
30–45 min at 110–130 bpm
Yoga / Stretching
15–20 min hip & spine focus
Nasal Breathing
During all low-intensity activity
Why Compound Movements?

Compound exercises recruit multiple muscle groups simultaneously. They are more time-efficient, produce a greater hormonal response, and are essential for maintaining functional strength as you age.

Deadlifting 45kg now means confidently lifting luggage, children, or furniture at 65
Goblet squats build the exact strength for getting up from chairs, floors, and low seats without assistance
Pull-ups develop the grip and back strength that prevents falls and maintains independence
Every kilogram you lift today is an investment in your mobility, independence, and quality of life decades from now.
IMPORTANT Prehab & Injury Prevention
Upper body strength
Focus: Shoulders, back, arms • 40-50 min
  • Dumbbell shoulder press 3×10
  • Bent-over rows 3×12
  • Lateral raises 3×15
  • Bicep curls 2×12
  • Tricep dips 2×10
  • 5 min cool-down stretch
Tuesday Cardio — Walking + Yoga
Walking and yoga
Focus: Cardiovascular + flexibility • 60 min total
  • Brisk outdoor walk 30–45 min (Zone 2 HR)
  • Yoga flow 20–30 min (hip openers, hamstrings, spine)
  • Nasal breathing throughout (NOS3 support)
Wednesday Strength — Lower Body
Lower body strength
Focus: Glutes, quads, hamstrings • 40-50 min
  • Goblet squats 3×12
  • Romanian deadlifts 3×10
  • Walking lunges 3×12 each leg
  • Hip thrusts 3×15
  • Calf raises 3×15
  • Prehab: Banded clamshells 2×15
Thursday Active Recovery
  • Gentle walk 20–30 min
  • Foam rolling 10 min (full body)
  • Breathwork: 4-7-8 breathing ×10 rounds
  • Optional: Swimming or light stretching
Friday Strength — Full Body Circuit
Full body circuit
Focus: Compound movements • 35-45 min
  • Kettlebell swings 3×15
  • Push-ups 3×10
  • TRX rows 3×12
  • Plank holds 3×30 sec
  • Box step-ups 3×10 each leg
  • Prehab: Band pull-aparts 2×15
Saturday Cardio — Longer Walk or Hike
  • Outdoor walk/hike 60–90 min (Zone 2)
  • Optional: Gentle yoga 15 min post-walk
  • Nature exposure for cortisol reduction
Sunday Rest & Recovery
  • Complete rest or gentle stretching only
  • Slow recovery genotype — this day is non-negotiable
  • Foam rolling, breathwork, or meditation
⚠️
High Injury Predisposition

Your Stride DNA shows a high injury predisposition and slow recovery profile. Always include prehabilitative exercises (banded work, mobility drills), allow 48–72 hours between strength sessions for the same muscle group, and never skip warm-ups. Prioritise connective tissue health with collagen peptides and vitamin C.

Sleep and Recovery
RECOVERY

Sleep, Stress & Recovery

Current Sleep Profile

Chronotype: Mixed (Stride DNA)
Sleep Quality: Low (genetic predisposition)
Caffeine Sensitivity: Higher than average
COMT Genotype: Warrior GG (fast dopamine clearance)
HRV (Night Avg): 121 ms (excellent)
Resting HR: 56 bpm (optimal)

Stress Profile

Stress Tolerance: Raised (genetic advantage)
COMT GG: Fast dopamine metabolism — performs well under pressure
Recovery Rate: Slow (requires adequate rest)
Priority: Despite good stress tolerance, sleep quality needs active management
🌙

Sleep Optimisation Protocol

Pre-Sleep Routine (21:00)
  • • Dim lights — switch to warm/amber lighting
  • • Avoid screens or use blue-light blocking glasses
  • • Warm bath with Epsom salts (magnesium absorption)
  • • 4-7-8 breathwork: 10 rounds
  • • No caffeine after 14:00 (higher genetic sensitivity)
  • • Tart cherry juice (natural melatonin precursor)
Sleep Environment
  • • Room temperature: 16–18°C
  • • Complete darkness (blackout blinds)
  • • Quiet or white noise machine
  • • Magnesium glycinate 200–400 mg (bedtime)
  • • Consistent sleep/wake times (±30 min)
  • • No eating within 2–3 hours of sleep
🧘

Stress Management Strategies

🫁
Breathwork
10–15 min daily
Box breathing or 4-7-8
🧠
Mindfulness
5–10 min daily
Body scan or guided meditation
🌿
Nature Exposure
20+ min daily
Green space or garden time
📵
Digital Sunset
Screens off by 21:00
Blue light filter from 20:00

Daily Wellness Schedule

Optimised for Your Genetics • Timed Protocol
06:30

Morning Foundation

450ml kefir + 5g creatine (existing habit ✓). Add: 15 min morning light exposure (circadian reset). Glass of water with lemon.

07:00

Morning Supplements

5-MTHF 400mcg, Methylcobalamin B12 1000mcg, Vitamin D3 4000 IU + K2 200mcg, Omega-3 1000mg. Take with breakfast for fat-soluble absorption.

08:00

Breakfast

High-protein: eggs + spinach + avocado, or Greek yoghurt + berries + walnuts. 25–30g protein target.

10:00

Movement Break

5 min walk or stretching (prevent >2 hour sedentary periods for NOS3). Nasal breathing throughout.

12:30

Lunch

Protein-rich meal with beetroot/rocket salad (nitric oxide support). Last caffeine intake before 14:00.

15:00

Afternoon Supplements

Astaxanthin 4mg, Vitamin C 500mg. Optional: green tea (last caffeinated drink).

17:00

Exercise Window

Strength training or walking session (see Exercise plan). 10 min warm-up mandatory (high injury predisposition).

19:00

Dinner

Wild salmon/chicken + sweet potato + greens. Tryptophan-rich protein for serotonin/melatonin production. Last meal ≥2.5 hrs before bed.

20:00

Evening Wind-Down

Blue light filter on. Dim ambient lighting. Optional: tart cherry juice.

21:00

Pre-Sleep Protocol

Magnesium glycinate 200–400mg. Warm bath with Epsom salts. 4-7-8 breathwork ×10. Screens off.

22:00

Lights Out

Room 16–18°C, complete darkness, consistent timing ±30 min. Track with Ultrahuman Ring.

Morning wellness routine
Daily Protocol

Daily Wellness Protocol

Precision routines calibrated to your genetics, biology and clinical demands.

YOUR ROUTINE

Built around your Stride DNA results & clinical lifestyle

Morning

Wake-Up Routine

🥛

Kefir — 150ml with breakfast

Live cultures to seed gut microbiome. Particularly beneficial given MTHFR status — gut health supports methylation pathways.

💊

Supplements with food

Take all fat-soluble supplements (D3, Omega-3, Collagen) with a fat-containing meal for optimal absorption.

🌬

Nasal breathing — 5 minutes

Box breathing or simple nasal-only breathing upon waking. Activates parasympathetic tone before the clinical day begins.

Natural light exposure — first 30 min

Outdoor light within 30 minutes of waking anchors circadian rhythm and supports cortisol awakening response.

Genetics-Led

Supplement Stack

💪 Creatine monohydrate
5g daily
🧬 Methylfolate
400–800mcg
Vitamin D3 + K2
4,000 IU
😴 Magnesium glycinate
300mg PM
🐟 Omega-3 (EPA + DHA)
2g daily
🌟 Collagen peptides
10g daily
🍊 Vitamin C
1,000mg

MTHFR note: Use methylfolate specifically — standard folic acid is poorly metabolised with your MTHFR variant.

Daytime

Daily Targets

🥩 Protein
88–110g

1.6–2.0g per kg bodyweight. Prioritise leucine-rich sources: meat, fish, eggs, Greek yoghurt.

💧 Hydration
2.5–3L

Front-load morning. Electrolytes if in theatre or prolonged clinical work. Avoid caffeine after 14:00.

👟 Daily steps
10,000

Accumulate throughout the clinical day — parking further away, stairs, and short lunchtime walks all count.

Caffeine cutoff — 14:00

COMT GG means you process dopamine rapidly — caffeine can still disrupt sleep architecture if taken late. Hard stop at 2pm.

Stride DNA · COMT

Warrior Genotype — GG

High dopamine clearance · Stress resilient

What this means

Your COMT GG variant clears dopamine rapidly from the prefrontal cortex. In high-pressure clinical environments — operating theatres, complex consultations, emergency decisions — you remain clear-headed and decisive where others freeze.

Strengths

Excellent stress tolerance under pressure
Fast cognitive recovery after difficult cases
Less susceptible to burnout than Met/Met genotype

Watch points

Lower reward sensitivity — needs larger stimulus for motivation
Monitor stimulant intake — caffeine tolerance can mask fatigue
Pair high-demand days with strong decompression rituals

Why This Matters — The Full Picture

MTHFR Variant

Heterozygous MTHFR reduces your ability to convert folic acid to active folate. Methylfolate bypasses this and supports cardiovascular health, mood regulation, and cellular repair — critical at 45.

VDR Variation

Your Vitamin D receptor variant reduces cellular uptake efficiency. Standard supplementation (400–800IU) would leave you deficient. The 4,000IU dose achieves optimal tissue levels — not just normal range.

Creatine at 45

Beyond muscle — creatine at 5g daily has strong evidence for cognitive function, memory, and neuroprotection in perimenopausal women. Non-negotiable for a surgeon requiring sustained cognitive output.

Wearable technology
Wearable Data

Ultrahuman Ring AIR

24/7 biometric tracking revealing the story your body tells when no one is watching.

WEARABLE DATA Continuous biometric monitoring · Ultrahuman Ring AIR

Your Biometric Profile

Your wearable data reveals a picture of cardiovascular fitness and recovery that places you in the top tier for women your age.

56
bpm
Resting Heart Rate
Excellent

Elite athlete range for your age is 50–55 bpm. You are right at that threshold.

137
ms
Heart Rate Variability
Exceptional

Top 1% for women aged 45. Average is just 25–40 ms. You are nearly 4x above average.

98%
SpO2
Blood Oxygen
Normal

Healthy population range is 95–100%. Your oxygen saturation is optimal.

Sleep Score
82 /100
Good — above population average of 70
Movement Index
High
10,000+ steps on most days · Recovery score: Good
Population Comparison

How your metrics compare against average women aged 45 in the UK.

Metric
Average (45F)
Sarah
Rating
Resting Heart Rate
Average beats per minute at rest
72–78 bpm
56 bpm
↓ 22 bpm below average
Elite
Heart Rate Variability
Autonomic nervous system resilience
25–40 ms
137 ms
↑ ~3.8x above average
Top 1%
Blood Oxygen Saturation
SpO2 — cellular oxygen delivery
95–100%
98%
Within optimal range
Healthy
Your Ring Is Telling You

What these biometric numbers mean for your day-to-day health and longevity.

Elite cardiovascular efficiency
A resting heart rate of 56 bpm means your heart pumps blood more efficiently per beat than the vast majority of women your age. This is associated with significantly reduced cardiovascular risk.
Nervous system in exceptional balance
Your HRV of 137 ms is extraordinary. High HRV indicates your autonomic nervous system switches fluidly between activation and rest — better stress resilience, faster recovery, improved cognitive function.
Sleep quality is a genuine strength
An average sleep score of 82/100 tells us your body is achieving meaningful restorative sleep. This underpins your high HRV and low resting HR, since both are heavily sleep-dependent.
High movement is compounding your results
Consistently hitting 10,000+ steps daily contributes directly to your low resting HR and elevated HRV. Non-exercise activity (NEAT) has an outsized effect on metabolic health.
Ultrahuman Ring AIR — available through DoctoriumGP
The Ultrahuman Ring AIR captures cleaner biometric signals from the arterial-rich finger than wrist-based wearables. DoctoriumGP can supply the Ring AIR as part of an integrated health monitoring programme, with clinical interpretation of your data included.
Vitality and movement
Age Markers

Biological Age

How old your body really is — not what your passport says

Average Biological Advantage
20 Years
younger than your chronological age — across every marker measured
Chronological
45
Actual age
Passport age
GlycanAge
20
Immune age
↓ 25 years younger
Metabolic Age
30
Body Composition scan
↓ 15 years younger
🔭

What This Means for Your Future

Real-world impact of a 20-year biological advantage

🚶
At 65, you'll function like a 45-year-old
Your biological trajectory means the physical capability most people have at 45 is where you'll still be at 65.
🛍
Everyday physical tasks stay effortless
Carrying shopping, climbing stairs, lifting heavy bags — these remain easy where others struggle.
🧬
Immune system of someone decades younger
Your GlycanAge result shows inflammation is low and immune regulation is functioning at a 20-year-old level.
🤝
Playing with grandchildren — comfortably
Getting up and down from the floor, running around, keeping pace — your body will be capable of it all.
💪
Muscle mass = independence in later life
Lean muscle mass is the single strongest predictor of independence in your 70s and 80s. You have an excellent foundation.
🏋
2 days a week — this is what it buys you
This result isn't luck. It's the compound return on consistent effort. Two training days a week, done properly, is doing this.
💬

"This is what 2 days a week in the gym buys you — not just a better body now, but decades more of living life on your own terms."

🧪

What is GlycanAge?

Blood test

GlycanAge measures the biological age of your immune system using a highly precise blood analysis of IgG glycosylation patterns — the sugar molecules attached to your antibodies. As we age, these glycan structures shift in a predictable way. The test captures where you sit on that spectrum.

🔥
Inflammation
Measures chronic low-grade inflammation — the driver of most age-related disease
🛡
Immune Regulation
Tracks how well your immune system controls itself
Biological Clock
One of the most validated biomarkers of true biological ageing

Your result: 20. Exceptionally rare in a 45-year-old. Places your immune biological age in the top percentile for your age group. Reflects low systemic inflammation, strong immune regulation, and a lifestyle actively slowing the biological clock.

📊

Track Your Biological Age with DoctoriumGP

GlycanAge testing, Body Composition body composition scans, and a full personalised health report — all available through our clinic.

DoctoriumGP • Derby • CQC Registered

Skincare
Stride DNA · Genetic Analysis
Your Skin, Decoded

Skin Analysis

Genetic Skin Profile

Based on your Stride DNA results, this profile maps your genetic predispositions across eight core skin health markers.

Intrinsic Ageing
HIGH

Genetic predisposition to faster collagen breakdown — skin ages more quickly without active intervention.

Oxidative Stress
RAISED

Elevated free radical activity accelerates cell damage — antioxidant support is essential.

Inflammatory Response
HIGH

Heightened immune-linked inflammatory signalling — increases sensitivity, redness risk, and reactive skin conditions.

UV Sensitivity
MODERATE

Standard UV protection is sufficient — but given your high ageing risk, consistent SPF use is especially important.

Skin Hydration
NORMAL

Good baseline genetic capacity for moisture retention — maintain with standard hydration support.

Nickel Sensitivity
RAISED

Elevated contact dermatitis risk from nickel-containing metals, jewellery, and certain cosmetic ingredients.

Detoxification Capacity
REDUCED

Slower clearance of environmental toxins and skin metabolic by-products.

Glycation Risk
MODERATE

Moderate tendency for sugar molecules to cross-link with collagen — dietary sugar reduction supports skin firmness.

🧬

Your Skin Blueprint

Your genetic profile presents a clear challenge: two high-risk markers (intrinsic ageing and inflammatory response) compounded by raised oxidative stress and reduced detoxification. Your skin is genetically primed to break down collagen faster, react more sensitively to environmental triggers, and clear damaging compounds more slowly than average.

Your strategy is therefore anti-ageing and anti-inflammatory led: prioritise collagen defence, antioxidant loading, and inflammation control. The genetic disadvantages are highly manageable with consistency.

Current Recommended Protocol

Personalised to your genetic skin profile

SPF 50 Daily
Non-negotiable given UV sensitivity combined with high ageing and inflammatory risk.
AM
🍊
Vitamin C Serum
Morning application. Targets your oxidative stress vulnerability — neutralises free radicals and supports collagen synthesis.
AM
🌙
Retinol
Evening use. Gold standard for collagen stimulation. Start low and build gradually given your elevated inflammatory response.
PM
💧
Hyaluronic Acid
Morning and/or evening. Maintains your genetically sound hydration baseline.
AM/PM
💊
Collagen Peptides — 10g Daily
Oral supplement. Works from the inside to compensate for faster genetic collagen breakdown. 8–12 weeks for clinical benefits.
DAILY
🚫
Avoid Nickel Exposure
Costume jewellery, certain watch straps, fasteners, and some cosmetic pigments can trigger contact dermatitis. Opt for surgical steel, titanium, or gold.
AVOID
Skincare Protocol Comparison
Tailored to your genomic skin profile — personalised by DoctoriumGP
SkinCeuticals Protocol
PREMIUM
Approx. annual cost ~£450/yr
AM Routine
Simply Clean Gel
Cleanser
£35
C E Ferulic
Vitamin C serum — gold standard
£155
Phyto Corrective Gel
Anti-redness, inflammation
£65
Ultra Facial UV Defence SPF 50+
Sun protection
£38
PM Routine
Simply Clean Gel
Cleanser
same
Retinol 0.5
Collagen stimulation
£62
Daily Moisture
Barrier repair
£65
Available through DoctoriumGP at trade pricing
Budget Alternative
VALUE
Approx. annual cost ~£65/yr
AM Routine
CeraVe Foaming Cleanser
Cleanser
£11
The Ordinary Vitamin C 23% + HA
Vitamin C serum
£5
The Ordinary Niacinamide 10% + Zinc
Anti-redness, inflammation
£5
La Roche-Posay Anthelios SPF 50+
Sun protection
£12
PM Routine
CeraVe Foaming Cleanser
Cleanser
same
The Ordinary Retinol 0.5% in Squalane
Collagen stimulation
£6
CeraVe Moisturising Cream
Barrier repair
£13
Same active ingredients, different delivery systems
Priority Interventions
SPF 50 is non-negotiable — your genetics show elevated ageing, UV, and inflammatory risk.
Vitamin C serum AM is the highest-impact single addition — neutralises free radicals and synergises with SPF.
Retinol PM builds collagen to directly counteract your HIGH intrinsic ageing genetics.
If budget is limited, SPF + Vitamin C alone will deliver 80% of the benefit.
🔬
DoctoriumGP SkinScope

Want a Deeper Analysis?

DoctoriumGP SkinScope uses AI-powered imaging to assess your skin in detail — measuring texture, pores, pigmentation, hydration levels, and early signs of photoageing with clinical precision.

Fitness Tracking
INTERACTIVE TRACKER

Workout & Nutrition Log

Date
Exercise KG Sets Reps Vol
Session Summary
0
Exercises Done
0
Total Volume (kg)
0
Est. Minutes
Date
Breakfast
🥦
Lunch
🍗
Dinner
🍎
Snacks
Daily Protein 0g / 88-110g target
Water Intake (0/8)
💧
💧
💧
💧
💧
💧
💧
💧
Supplement Stack
Creatine
Methylfolate
Vitamin D3
Magnesium
Omega-3
Collagen
Vitamin C
Kefir
February 2026
This Week
0
Workouts
0g
Avg Protein
0
Day Streak
Saved
Wellness Roadmap
ROADMAP

Personalised Recommendations

VO2 Max Testing Integration

Planned

Professional lab-grade VO2 max testing to establish your true aerobic capacity and personalise training zones. Your Stride DNA shows medium VO2max potential with a balanced power/endurance profile — VO2 testing will reveal your actual fitness age and unlock precise heart rate zones for training.

🫁
Lab-Grade Testing
Professional metabolic cart analysis with real-time gas exchange
📊
Fitness Age Score
Your aerobic capacity vs age-matched population — like a metabolic age for fitness
❤️
Personalised Zones
5 precise HR training zones based on your lactate thresholds — not generic formulas
Immediate (0–3 Months)
  • • Start methylated supplement protocol
  • • Eliminate folic acid & seed oils
  • • Establish exercise routine (2×/week compound training)
  • • Implement sleep hygiene protocol
  • • Daily beetroot for nitric oxide
  • • Monitor coeliac symptoms
Medium-Term (3–6 Months)
  • • Repeat GlycanAge test (maintain <25)
  • • Vitamin D retest (target 100+ nmol/L)
  • • Progress strength training loads
  • • VO2 Max lab testing
  • • Reassess body composition trends
  • • Skin health improvements visible
Long-Term (6–12 Months)
  • • Sustain metabolic age advantage
  • • Full bloods + hormone panel recheck
  • • Maintain muscle mass ≥40 kg
  • • Visceral fat stable at 3
  • • Sustained lifestyle integration
  • • Annual GlycanAge benchmark
Key Success Factors
• Continue kefir & creatine (excellent existing habits)
• Methylated supplements are non-negotiable for genotype
• Prioritise antioxidant-rich whole foods
• Strength training 2×/week with prehab + active recovery
• Sleep hygiene protocol every night
• Regular biometric monitoring via Ultrahuman Ring

Daily Supplement Protocol

Already taking: 450ml kefir (mornings) + 5g creatine (mornings) — both excellent, continue.
Supplement Dose Timing Rationale
5-MTHF (Methylfolate) 400–800 mcg Morning MTHFR C677T reduces folate conversion 40%. Methylated form bypasses genetic block
Methylcobalamin (B12) 1000 mcg Morning Triple B12 impairment: MTRR GG + TCN2 GG + FUT2 AG
Vitamin D3 + K2 2000–4000 IU Morning with fat VDR CT impairs metabolism. UK climate. Test levels every 6 months
Omega-3 (EPA/DHA) 2000 mg With meals Raised genetic need + high inflammatory response + slow recovery
Vitamin C 500–1000 mg Split AM/PM Raised genetic need + collagen support (high skin ageing) + antioxidant
Vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) 200 IU With fat Raised genetic need + telomere protection + cellular defence
Magnesium Glycinate 300–400 mg Evening Supports methylation, sleep quality (genetically low), muscle recovery
Zinc 15 mg With food Supports BHMT pathway (impaired), immune function, skin repair
NAC (N-Acetyl Cysteine) 600 mg Morning Glutathione precursor — GSS TT reduces glutathione synthesis
Astaxanthin 4–12 mg With fat Reduces MMP expression — targets high intrinsic skin ageing
Creatine Already Taking 5 g Morning Muscle preservation, cognitive function, methylation support
Kefir Already Taking 450 ml Morning Gut health, probiotics, B12 absorption support

Skin Optimisation Protocol

Based on: High intrinsic ageing, raised oxidative stress, high inflammatory response, reduced detoxification
1
SPF 50+ daily
Non-negotiable. High intrinsic ageing + raised oxidative stress means UV damage compounds rapidly
2
Vitamin C serum (topical)
AM application. Supports collagen synthesis + antioxidant shield
3
Retinol (topical)
PM application, build tolerance gradually. Stimulates collagen for COL1A1 variant
4
Astaxanthin (oral)
4–12mg daily. Clinically shown to reduce MMP expression in skin
5
Antioxidant-rich diet
Berries, leafy greens, colourful veg. Compensate for raised oxidative stress
6
Avoid nickel exposure
Raised sensitivity. Watch jewellery, watch bands, belt buckles, zips
7
Cruciferous vegetables daily
Support Phase II detoxification (genetically reduced)
8
Hydration focus
2.5–3L water. Skin hydration supports barrier function

Methylation Optimisation

Based on: Impaired Methionine Cycle, Moderate Folate/Transsulphuration/BH4/Urea Cycles
1
Methylated B vitamins essential
5-MTHF + methylcobalamin. Do NOT use folic acid or cyanocobalamin.
2
Support SAMe synthesis
Zinc, magnesium, potassium (avocados, dark chocolate, cashews)
3
Choline + betaine priority
PEMT TT + BHMT AA = both pathways reduced. Eggs, beetroot, spinach.
4
Monitor homocysteine
Methionine cycle impaired. Blood test every 6 months.
5
Nasal breathing practice
Supports nitric oxide production (NOS3 GT variant)
6
Minimise heavy metal exposure
Mercury (limit large fish), lead, aluminium (cookware)
7
Glutathione support
NAC 600mg daily + cysteine-rich foods (eggs, garlic). GSS TT reduces synthesis.
8
B6 from food
Chickpeas, salmon, turkey. Supports transsulphuration pathway.

Monitoring & Retesting Schedule

Test Frequency Next Due Notes
Blood Tests Every 6 months Aug 2026 Add: homocysteine, vitamin D, B12, folate, ferritin
Body Composition Body Composition Monthly Mar 2026 Track muscle mass preservation
GlycanAge 9–12 months Feb–May 2026 Retest to confirm maintenance
Ultrahuman Ring Daily Ongoing HRV, sleep quality, readiness scores
tTG Antibody Test Once Next bloods Rule out active coeliac disease (raised genetic predisposition)
Homocysteine Every 6 months Aug 2026 Key methylation marker
Vitamin D levels Every 6 months Aug 2026 VDR CT impairs metabolism

Coeliac Awareness

Stride DNA reveals a raised genetic predisposition for coeliac disease. This does NOT mean coeliac is present — it means the genetic risk exists. Monitor for symptoms: bloating, fatigue, or brain fog after gluten. A tTG antibody blood test can rule out active disease. No need to eliminate gluten unless symptomatic, but awareness is key.

Clinical Insights

Biological Age 24 Years Younger

GlycanAge biological age of 20 vs chronological age 44 is an extraordinary result. Combined with a metabolic age of 30 from Body Composition, this paints a picture of someone ageing at roughly half the expected rate. Glycan Shield at the 95th percentile confirms exceptional immune regulation and minimal chronic inflammation.

Impaired Methylation Requires Targeted Support

Stride DNA reveals an impaired Methionine Cycle with 7 raised nutrient needs. MTHFR C677T (40% reduced), MTRR GG, BHMT AA, and PEMT TT variants mean methylated B vitamins, choline, and targeted supplementation are essential — not optional. Homocysteine monitoring every 6 months is strongly recommended.

Muscle Mass Decline — Priority Action

Muscle mass dropped 1.4 kg over 11 weeks (41.9 → 40.5 kg), accelerating in the last scan. Combined with the slow genetic recovery profile and high injury predisposition, resistance training 2x/week (compound movements with Mike, plus home dumbbell alternatives) combined with 88–110g daily protein is now the single most important intervention. Prehabilitation exercises are essential every session.

Exceptional Cardiovascular Fitness

Ultrahuman Ring data confirms outstanding cardiovascular health: resting HR 56 bpm, HRV 137 ms (top decile for age 45), SpO2 98%. Blood tests corroborate with perfect lipid panel (total cholesterol 5.0, HDL 1.49, triglycerides 0.71). The one area to watch is the Glycan Median (G1) at the 23rd percentile, suggesting slightly reduced vascular resilience.

Skin Needs Proactive Defence

Stride Skin DNA shows high intrinsic ageing, raised oxidative stress, and high inflammatory response — a triple challenge. However, this is highly actionable: daily SPF 50+, topical vitamin C and retinol, oral astaxanthin (4–12 mg), and an antioxidant-rich diet can significantly slow extrinsic ageing. Nickel sensitivity warrants awareness with jewellery and accessories.

Sleep Quality Needs Environmental Optimisation

Genetic sleep quality is at the lower end of the scale, with higher caffeine sensitivity compounding the issue. Despite this, HRV data shows excellent night-time recovery (121 ms average) — suggesting current habits are partially compensating. No caffeine after noon, consistent schedule, cool bedroom, and magnesium before bed are the key levers. The warrior (GG) genotype means stress resilience is strong, but needs challenge to perform.

A+
Exceptional — Ageing at Half the Expected Rate

Across 8 data sources and over 100 biomarkers, Sarah presents an extraordinary health profile for a 45-year-old female. A biological age of 20 (GlycanAge), metabolic age of 30 (Body Composition), textbook blood panel, and HRV in the top decile all confirm someone ageing at roughly half the expected rate. The key actionable areas are: preserving muscle mass through resistance training and higher protein, targeted methylation support via methylated B vitamins, and proactive skin defence against the high intrinsic ageing genetics. With the personalised supplement protocol and lifestyle optimisations now in place, the trajectory is set for long-term exceptional health.

Biological Age: 20 Metabolic Age: 30 HRV: Top 10% Blood Panel: Perfect Visceral Fat: 3 GlycanAge: 95th %ile Methylation: Action Needed 8 Sources Analysed