<div></div><div id="QUOTEHEAD">QUOTE</div><div id="QUOTE">Labs have a reference range for anything tested, such as testosterone, cholesterol, and so on.
The test always has that range with the results of your test next to it, and it's easy enough to read.
For example: normal testosterone levels range from a low of 300ng/dl to a high of 1200ng/dl*.
A testosterone level between those numbers (mine was 520) is considered "normal."
Free (unbound) testosterone has a low/high range of 8.7pg/ml - 25pg/ml.</div>
Below, the full blood spectrum:
Testosterone: normal range 300 - 1200 ng/dl
Free testosterone: normal range 8.7 - 25pg/ml
IGF-1:normal range 109-284 ng/ml
Estradiol:normal range 5 - 53 for adult male pg/ml
DHEA-s:normal range 120 - 520 ug/dl
Thyroid panel
T4: normal range 4.5 - 12 ug/dl
T3: normal range 2.3 - 4.2 pg/ml
TSH:0.350 - 5.500 uIU/ml
Total cholesterol:normal healthy range 100 - 199 mg/dl
LDL fraction:normal range 0 - 99 mg/dl
HDL fraction:normal range 40 - 59 mg/dl
Triglycerides:normal range 0 - 149 mg/dl
C-reactive protein:> 2 mg/l increased risk of MI and stroke
Homocysteine:normal range 6.3 - 15 umol/L
Alkaline phosphatase:Normal range 25 - 150 IU/L
GGT:normal range 0 - 65 IU/L
SGOT:normal range 0 - 40 IU/L
SGPT:normal range 0-40 IU/L
PSA:normal 0.0 - 4.0 ng/ml
Creatinine:normal 0.5 - 1.5 mg/dl
BUN:normal range 5 - 26 mg/dl
Creatinine/BUN ratio:normal 8 - 27